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More than 40 Native leaders from potato-producing communities in the Andean region of Peru came together last weekend in the Sacred Valley in Cusco to sign a strongly worded letter to the company protesting introduction of the new strain.
The Native leaders gathered at a meeting called by the Quechua-Aymara Association for Nature and Sustainable Development in Peru and the International Institute for Environment & Development (IIED) in London. The Quechua-Aymara Association for Nature Conservation and Sustainable Development (ANDES) is governed by a general assembly largely composed of indigenous people from Andean villages.
The call to the Switzerland-based company came as government officials met in Brazil this week for a United Nations biodiversity conference where terminator technology was heatedly debated.
"Most of the world's farmers who grow potatoes save potato tubers at harvest time to use as 'seed' for the following year's crop," Dr. Michel Pimbert, program director for agriculture and biodiversity at IIED, told IPS.
"Terminator technology applied to potatoes is designed to make this impossible. Farmers integrated in markets, for example in Europe and the USA, would have to go back to the owners of these GMO (genetically modified organisms) potatoes each year and buy new potato seed."
But farmers elsewhere who choose not to go for terminator potatoes are also at risk, he said. "For small-scale farmers living in the Andes where potatoes originate, or for organic potato producers in other parts of the world, the risk is that terminator-type potatoes will release small amounts of pollen that can genetically contaminate their non-GMO potatoes."
Native people fear that it would destroy the sharing of seeds, a centuries-old tradition, and with it their cultural and social way of life.
"Potatoes are like rice is to the Philippines or Thailand for Peruvian farmers and other small farmers living in the Andes countries like Bolivia, Ecuador and Chile," Pimbert told IPS. "They are a hugely important crop for local and national economies." Potato is also a major crop in countries like the Netherlands, France and Britain.
Legal challenges are possible, Pimbert said.
"A legal challenge could be contemplated by farming communities that developed the original potato germplasm used and patented by biotech companies -- on the grounds that this is a form of institutionalized theft of their knowledge and innovations."
Similarly, he said, "organic or other farmers in Europe or elsewhere whose potato crops are contaminated by gene flow from the terminator potato can decide to sue the corporation."
Pimbert said, however, that "the playing field is uneven -- with corporations much better endowed with lawyers and legal expertise and funds than farmers -- and the financial costs of prolonged legal battles so high that many farmers and their organizations would have a tough time winning court cases. This is why it is absolutely vital that the moratorium on terminator is upheld."
As a result of biosafety and other concerns, an international moratorium under the Convention on Biological Diversity has stopped the field testing and commercial use of terminator technology since 2000, the IIED said in a statement.
Some governments want to relax the United Nations' biosafety regulation, but the main biotech companies have accepted that public concern and environmental risk is too great to press ahead.
Alejandro Argumedo, associate director of the Quechua-Aymara Association for Nature and Sustainable Development, said in a statement: "We want the big companies like Syngenta to show corporate social and environmental responsibility. The irresponsible attempt by some governments to bust the moratorium is motivated by power and greed at the expense of people, the environment and poverty reduction. Syngenta could prove that they are on the right side by abandoning their patent on the terminator potato."
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