SMHRIC |
Sep 14, 2007 |
New York |
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Southern Mongolian representatives at the United
Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)
meeting in Interlaken, Switzerland |
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Press conference by the Forum members and supporting
organizations |
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Discussion between the Forum attendees and the FAO
representatives |
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Organized
by the Southern Mongolian Human Rights Information Center, a
delegation from Southern Mongolia representing the Southern
Mongolian mobile indigenous community attended the "Forum on
Livestock Diversity: Defending Food Sovereignty and Livestock
Keeper's Rights" held in parallel to the United Nations Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO)'s International Technical
Conference on Animal Genetic Resource in Interlaken,
Switzerland, from September 1 through 6, 2007. The main topics
presented at the Forum by the Southern Mongolian delegation are
the issues of "Ecological Migration", "Livestock Grazing Ban",
and the various forms of land appropriation in Southern
Mongolia.
Representatives of
more than 30 organizations of pastoralists, indigenous peoples,
smallholders and NGOs from 26 countries in both the
North and South attended the
Forum and discussed the issues facing pastoral communities
around the world today. The Forum was facilitated by the International
Planning Committee for Food Sovereignty (IPC), as agreed by FAO, with the strong support of
the Local Livestock for Empowerment of Rural People (LIFE)
, League for Pastoral Peoples (LPP) and SWISSAID that
established a
Steering Committee for the Forum. Participants were carefully
selected on the basis of their active work related to livestock
issues and their support of the principles of food sovereignty.
The overall aims of the Forum are:
1),
To discuss the importance and role of animal
diversity to local communities of pastoralists, Indigenous
Peoples, farmers, etc. and to situate animal diversity in its
proper context of rights to land, mobility, water, and food
sovereignty.
2),
To discuss how to protect and enhance animal
diversity, including the concept of livestock keepers rights
from a grassroots perspective.
3), To discuss the implications of
developments in science, technology as well as legislation and
policy on animal diversity and livestock keeping communities.
All members of the
Forum were invited to attend the FAO International Technical
Conference on Animal Genetic Resource as observers. The main
purposes of the Conference are to reach agreement on how to best
address priorities for the sustainable use, development and
conservation of animal genetic resource and to raise awareness
and appreciation of the various roles and values of these
essential resources. Outputs of the Conference are the
State of the World's Animal Genetic
Resource for Food And Agriculture
and the
Interlaken Declaration
that adopted the Global Plan of Action for Animal Genetic
Resources. In order to advice the Conference on food sovereignty
and livestock keeper's rights, the Forum adopted the
Wilderswil Declaration on Livestock
Diversity
that was read out at the Conference on September 7, by Maryam
Rahmanian, one of the organizers of the Forum. The following is
the full text of the Declaration:
WILDERSWIL DECLARATION ON
LIVESTOCK DIVERSITY
Wilderswil,
Switzerland, 6 September 2007
We, representatives of 30
organizations of pastoralists, indigenous peoples, smallholder
farmers and NGOs from 26 countries in both the North and the
South came together in Wilderswil at our “Livestock Diversity
Forum: Defending Food Sovereignty and Livestock Keepers’
Rights”. We met in parallel with FAO’s International Technical
Conference on Animal Genetic Resources held in Interlaken.
We are here to fight for our
rights as livestock keepers. We realize that we are just a small
fraction of all the organizations that exist throughout the
world. But we recognise that our struggle is common to the
social organisations of nomadic pastoralists, herders,
indigenous peoples and small farmers in both the North and
South. Our main purpose of coming together was to further
strengthen our movement and deepen our analysis and
collaboration.
The global livestock crisis
The industrial model of livestock
production is causing the destruction of our animal diversity as
well as our own livelihoods. Today, the industrial livestock
breeding and production system is being imposed globally as the
dominant model for the world’s livestock production. It requires
high levels of investment in technology and receives subsidies
and other resources, which have distorted the market. This has
led to an unprecedented concentration of, and dependence upon,
the livestock breeding industry. For example, there are only
four globally operating poultry breeding companies worldwide
with only two of them controlling half of the world’s egg
production. While the breeding companies are Northern, the
growing market for their products is increasingly in the South
because industrial livestock production is being promoted there.
The growth of industrial livestock production has already
resulted in the destruction of the livelihoods of small-scale
livestock producers. Furthermore this model of production is
based on a dangerously narrow genetic base of the world’s
livestock, propped up by the widespread use of veterinary drugs.
Yet this risky and high cost system is providing more and more
of our food: globally, one third of pigs, one half of eggs, two
thirds of milk and three quarters of broilers are produced from
industrial breeding lines.
How industrial livestock
production is advanced
The industrial model is imposed
on us through land grabs and evictions based on systems of
private property ownership, forced sedenterisation policies and
disruption of pastoral migration routes, liberalization of
markets, contract farming, large scale economic development
projects such as mining (and their consequences such as the
privatisation of water resources by transnational companies),
agrofuel production schemes, and even through policies that aim
to conserve nature through national parks and protected areas.
In recent decades, it has also been achieved through the
imposition of trade rules that enable dumping, which destroys
local markets, and that force us to produce food based on the
industrial model for export.
The policies of structural
adjustment and the privatization of land, water and veterinary
services and the drive for proprietary technologies, such as
cloning and genetic modification, are other tools used to
destroy our way of life. Tragically, these policies have led to
an increase in competition for the appropriation of natural
resources which has resulted in a dramatic increase of violent
conflicts, wars and occupations.
This model of production is
detrimental to health of both humans and livestock. Marketing
strategies are used to encourage high and unhealthy quantities
of livestock products for consumption. Health measures that
facilitate the global trade of industrially produced livestock
are destroying our local small-scale production. We cannot
accept that sanitary and hygiene regulations should be defined
under the control of the World Trade Organisation responding
only to the demand to liberalise markets. The standards of
health and quality of livestock products must respond to the
needs of consumers and not the needs of industry.
The consequences of industrial
livestock production
We note the following
consequences in our communities: loss of small and family based
production; smallholder bankruptcies and suicides; economic
dependency, including through importation of feed; destruction
of environment; young and new herders cannot enter into
production because of economic barriers; breakdown of social
relations; government research and breeding policies geared
towards “high productivity” with the indiscriminate introduction
of new breeds which have caused us to lose our local breeds.
Towards Food Sovereignty and
collective rights
We affirm that it is not possible
to conserve animal diversity without protecting and
strengthening the local communities that currently maintain and
nurture this diversity. We want livestock keeping that is on a
human scale. We defend a way of life that is linked deeply with
our cultures and spirituality and not just aimed at production.
We are building our capacities to organize ourselves to counter
the pressure to conform with the industrial model. We are
adopting the framework of food sovereignty which was developed
by small farmers’ movements and others, who face many similar
problems stemming from industrial agriculture, and which is
already starting to be recognized by several governments. We
will continue to further develop alternative research approaches
and technologies that allow us to be autonomous and put control
of genetic resources and livestock breeding in the hands of
livestock keepers and other small-scale producers. And we will
organise ourselves to conserve rare breeds.
We are committed to fighting for
our lands, territories and grazing pastures, our migratory
routes, including trans-boundary routes. We will build alliances
with other social movements with similar aims and continue to
build international solidarity. We will fight for the rights of
livestock keepers which include the right to land, water,
veterinary and other services, culture, education and training,
access to local markets, access to information and decision
making, that are all essential for truly sustainable livestock
production systems. We are committed to finding ways of sharing
access to land and other resources with pastoralists, indigenous
peoples, small farmers and other food producers according to
equitable, but controlled, access.
Ownership, knowledge and
innovation at the community level are often of a collective
nature. Therefore local knowledge and biodiversity can only be
protected and promoted through collective rights. Collective
knowledge is intimately linked to cultural diversity, particular
ecosystems, and biodiversity and cannot be dissociated from
either of these three aspects. Any definition and implementation
of the rights of livestock keepers should take this fully into
account. It is clear that the rights of livestock keepers are
not compatible with intellectual property rights systems because
these systems enable exclusive and private monopoly control.
There must be no patents or other forms of intellectual property
rights on biodiversity and the knowledge related to it.
States should recognise the
customary laws, territories, traditions, customs and
institutions of local communities and indigenous peoples, which
constitute the recognition of the self-determination and
autonomy of these peoples. Governments should accept and
guarantee collective rights and community control over natural
resources, including communal grazing lands and migration
routes, water, and livestock breeds. Governments should engage
in creating legally binding international instruments which
would oblige States to guarantee the full respect of these
rights.
The FAO Global Plan of Action
The FAO Report on the State of
the World’s Animal Genetic Resources contains a good analysis of
some of the key causes behind the destruction of the
biodiversity of domestic animals and the undermining of the
livelihoods of local communities that nurture this diversity.
The Report squarely points to the industrial livestock system as
one of the main forces behind this destruction. However, in the
Global Plan of Action there is nothing that addresses these
causes. It is totally unacceptable that governments agree on a
plan that does not challenge the policies that cause the loss of
diversity. Nor are governments even committing themselves to
make any substantial financial engagements to implement their
own Plan.
The social organizations of
pastoralists, herders and farmers have no interest in
participating in a plan which does not address the central
causes behind the destruction of livestock diversity but rather
provides crutches / weak support / for a collapsing global
livestock production system Because the Global Plan of Action
does not challenge industrial livestock production, we reinforce
our commitment to organise ourselves, to save livestock
diversity and to counter the negative forces bearing on us.
However, we remain open and willing to participate in any useful
follow up that might be facilitated through FAO.
Defending livestock diversity is
not a matter of genes but of collective rights. |