http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/05/26/monsanto-the-toxic-face-of-globalization/
To the rhythms of drums and chants, concerned people took to the
streets across 436 cities in 52 countries yesterday. The message was
clear: smash Monsanto. With thousands marching from coast to coast,
Canada to Argentina, and around the world, the day of protest has
emerged as one of the largest global events—and it has only been around
for two years. However, more than small hopes for a mandatory labeling
of genetically modified products, smashing Monsanto entails a
larger transformation of the modern relationship between people and
food.
It is not only GM products, but the continuing economy of
globalization, that Monsanto represents. Thanks to major seed companies
and agricultural conglomerates like Monsanto and Cargill, the very
definition of farmer has changed throughout the world—from a person or
group of people in a given community who specialized in producing food
to a corporate, land-owning entity comprised more of machines,
technological assemblages, and inputs than of people who work the land.
Thus, the target of protest is not only GMs, although GMs are a central
aspect, but also the supply chain of multinational corporations that
transforms food into a commodity that many throughout the world cannot
afford.
In the context of today’s historical epoch—the Global Land Grab, in
which farmland is being grabbed by multinational corporations from
vulnerable populations like small farmers, campesin@s, and Indigenous
peoples throughout the world—the March Against Monsanto has taken on a
particularly sharp edge. In Ethiopia, where Monsanto has taken up shop
through the New Alliance for Food Security and Nutrition, reports have
emerged of tens, if not hundreds of thousands of people flooding the
streets of the capital city, Addis Ababa, to demonstrate against land
grabbing.
Monsanto has also ingrained itself in Mali since the US-backed coup
of 2012, in spite of renewed fighting in the North that only yesterday
claimed the lives of 50 soldiers. Malian cotton farmers, who have
resisted Monsanto’s genetically modified Bt Cotton seeds since 2004, are
being brushed to the side. The process of side-stepping traditional
agriculture moved forward in 2010 through the IMF-mandated privatization
of La Compagnie malienne pour le développement du textile
against the organized opposition of farmers who petitioned through the
People’s Forum. A year after the coup, the USDA announced that Malian
farmers are “ready to adopt Bt Cotton,” although Mali’s “biosafety law
needs to be revised and made functional.” The biosafety law is to be
removed, because it restricts the ability of researchers to run field
tests.
READ MORE: http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/05/26/monsanto-the-toxic-face-of-globalization/
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