IC Magazine
reports on the recent victory of the Mayan People’s Movement against
Monsanto’s attempt to bring their patented, genetically engineered seeds
into Guatemala, displacing traditional seed diversity:
On September 4th, after ten days of widespread street
protests against the biotech giant Monsanto’s expansion into Guatemalan
territory, groups of indigenous people joined by social movements, trade
unions and farmer and women’s organizations won a victory when congress
finally repealed the legislation that had been approved in June.
The demonstrations were concentrated outside the Congress and
Constitutional Court in Guatemala City during more than a week, and
coincided with several Mayan communities and organizations defending
food sovereignty through court injunctions in order to stop the Congress
and the President, Otto Perez Molina, from letting the new law on
protection of plant varieties, known as the “Monsanto Law”, take effect.
On September 2, the Mayan communities of Sololá, a mountainous region
125 kilometers west from the capital, took to the streets and blocked
several main roads. At this time a list of how individual congressmen
had voted on the approval of the legislation in June was circulating.
When Congress convened on September 4, Mayan people were waiting
outside for a response in favor of their movement, demanding a complete
cancellation of the law –something very rarely seen in Guatemala. But
this time they proved not to have marched in vain. After some battles
between the presidential Patriotic Party (PP) and the Renewed Democratic
Liberty Party (LIDER), the Congress finally decided not to review the
legislation, but cancel it.
Lolita Chávez from the Mayan People’s Council summarized the essence
of what has been at stake these last weeks of peaceful protests as
follows: “Corn taught us Mayan people about community life and its
diversity, because when one cultivates corn one realizes that there is a
variety of crops such as herbs and medical plants depending on the corn
plant as well. We see that in this coexistence the corn is not selfish,
the corn shows us how to resist and how to relate with the surrounding
world.”
Controversies surrounded law
The Monsanto Law would have given exclusivity on patented seeds to a
handful of transnational companies. Mayan people and social
organizations claimed that the new law violated the Constitution and the
Mayan people’s right to traditional cultivation of their land in their
ancestral territories.
No comments:
Post a Comment