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Judi Lynn

(160,450 posts)
12. From May 26, 2011: El Salvadoran Government & Social Movements Say No to Monsanto
Tue Jun 10, 2014, 02:01 PM
Jun 2014

AlterNet / By Carlos Martinez
El Salvadoran Government & Social Movements Say No to Monsanto

El Salvador's breadbasket has an alternative vision to the one that US biotech firms like Monsanto would like to impose: "food sovereignty."

May 26, 2011 |

On the morning of Friday, May 6th President Mauricio Funes of El Salvador’s left-wing FMLN party, arrived at the La Maroma agricultural cooperative in the department of Usulután for a potentially historic meeting with hundreds of small family farmers. Usulután has often been referred to as the country’s bread basket for its fertile soil and capacity for agricultural production, making it one of the most strategic and violent battleground zones during El Salvador’s twelve year civil war between the US-supported government and the FMLN guerrilla movement.

Once again, Usulután has entered the spotlight for its agricultural reputation. The FMLN, which initially formed around an ideology of national liberation from US hegemony, has now adopted the goal of “food sovereignty,” the idea that countries hold the right to define their own agricultural policies, rather than being subject to the whims of international market forces. On Friday, officials representing the Ministry of Agriculture and the local governorship accompanied President Funes in inaugurating a new plan aimed at reactivating the country’s historically ignored rural economy and reversing El Salvador’s growing dependence on imported grains.

The opening ceremony for the new plan was hosted by the Mangrove Association, a non-governmental organization established by members of a grassroots social movement called La Coordinadora del Bajo Lempa y Bahia de Jiquilisco (known locally as La Coordinadora), which has been supporting initiatives for food security and environmental sustainability in Usulután for over 15 years. Over the last three months, the Ministry of Agriculture has been working closely with the Mangrove Association and other campesino organizations to develop what may represent the new program’s greatest break from past governments’ agricultural policies: a goal that by 2014 all corn and bean seed needed for agriculture be produced by Salvadoran farmers, rather than purchased from multinational seed companies, namely Monsanto, as has been the case in recent years.

With ongoing support from the U.S.-based NGO EcoViva, La Coordinadora and the Mangrove Association have been working since the mid-1990s to promote diversified, sustainable agriculture for small family farmers in Usulután as a means for reducing hunger and building a strong rural economy. According to official figures, almost 95% of fruit and vegetables consumed in El Salvador are imported from abroad, along with 30% of all its beans and 40% of corn. Meanwhile, non-commercial small family farmers are said to produce up to 70% of the basic grains that are cultivated domestically, mostly for their own family’s consumption, making them particularly important for El Salvador’s food security.

More:
http://www.alternet.org/story/151106/el_salvadoran_government_%26_social_movements_say_no_to_monsanto

just cut out the middle man and give 10% of the aid to Monsanto tk2kewl Jun 2014 #1
Seems a tad fascist. stillwaiting Jun 2014 #2
Yes, it certainly does. truedelphi Jun 2014 #9
What is the source of this report? Link does not work. yellowcanine Jun 2014 #3
Here's a different link for the same article: Judi Lynn Jun 2014 #5
Yes and it is short on actual facts and long on assertions and speculation. yellowcanine Jun 2014 #7
cultural genocide central scrutinizer Jun 2014 #4
'GMO seeds have "terminator" genes.' Not true. yellowcanine Jun 2014 #8
This link might be helpful in understanding GMOs. yellowcanine Jun 2014 #10
NPR? Why don't we just go to the Monsanto website Enthusiast Jun 2014 #14
"And which side are you on, anyway?" Nice. Yes, that is a convincing argument. yellowcanine Jun 2014 #15
I know the history of Monsanto's propaganda effort. Enthusiast Jun 2014 #16
Yeah, that's a convincing argument also. yellowcanine Jun 2014 #17
I'm not interested in corporate "facts". Enthusiast Jun 2014 #18
How about just facts, then? Care to refute the NPR story by Dan Charles? yellowcanine Jun 2014 #19
Time to update our flag w/Monsanto - TBF Jun 2014 #6
When I think Monsanto navarth Jun 2014 #11
From May 26, 2011: El Salvadoran Government & Social Movements Say No to Monsanto Judi Lynn Jun 2014 #12
Anybody still think we're not a corporatist state? CanonRay Jun 2014 #13
El Salvador: US tries to block seed program Judi Lynn Jun 2014 #20
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