| Geneva, December 15, 2003 – As country delegates from                     around the globe gather here today at the World Trade Organisation                     (WTO) headquarters to look for ways to go ahead with international                     trade talks, a number of civil society organisations * presented                     a letter explaining why the WTO should stay out of the food                     and agriculture sectors. When the WTO’s ministerial meeting collapsed in Cancún,                     Mexico, in September 2003, organisations representing millions                     of people from around the world hailed the collapse as a victory                     for their campaigns to stop governments pushing unwanted liberalisation                     and privatisation policies upon them. The letter presented today criticizes the US and the European                     Union and their quest for foreign agricultural markets that                     is devastating rural peasant and independent family farm-based                     economies, especially in the South, and driving them off their                     lands. But the groups also criticise the so-called Group of 20 (formerly                     the G 21) developing nations, which “although a badly                     needed political counterweight to the US and the EU, mainly                     represents exporting interests in the South but does not defend                     the interests of the large majority of small scale farmers                     and peasants producing for domestic markets.” The social movements state that current liberalisation policies                     focus on increasing exports that satisfy the needs of corporations                     and threaten the livelihoods of the poorest. Included in their                     letter is a list of suggestions to change the current international                     framework for agricultural policies taking peoples’                     food sovereignty as a leading principle. Among others, it                     asks national governments to protect domestic food production                     and distribution, and to claim the right to apply these measures                     as a fundamental human right that cannot be traded-off against                     other concessions. “Trade negotiators think it acceptable to sacrifice                     local food production and consumption, and the livelihoods                     of millions of farmers, in return for increased access to                     international markets for their main exporters. But social                     movements around the world claim that control of world’s                     food supply can not and must not lie in the hands of an unaccountable,                     undemocratic and non-transparent body, such as the World Trade                     Organization. ,” say the civil society organizations. The letter states that the main conflict in international                     trade is not a North-South conflict: it is a social conflict                     that needs to be adressed. It is a conflict between corporate,                     export orientated agriculture and a handful of big agricultural                     producers on one hand and on the other hand de-centralized,                     peasant- and family farm-based sustainable production primarily                     oriented towards domestic markets, in which hundreds of millions                     need to find an existence. To view the letter, go to http://www.viacampsina.org                     – under “new”
 To view the People’s Food Sovereignty Statement, go                     to
 http://www.viacampesina.org/art_english.php3?id_article=34
 NOTES for editors:*: Among the group are international movements who represent                     millions of peasants, family farmers, fisherfolk and as of                     December 11, 2003 they include:
 Colibri, Development Fund, ETC-group, Focus on the Global                     South, IATP, IBON, Public Citizen, REDES-Uruguay, Via Campesina                     (Internatinonal Farmers’ Movement), WFF (World Forum                     of Fish Harvesters and Fishworkers), Center for Encounter                     and active Non-Violence-Austria, FoodFirst-USA, Comité                     para la Defensa y Desarrollo de la Flora y Fauna del Golfo                     de Fonseca (CODDEFFAGOLF-Honduras),
 
 
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