Community | December 28, 2009 | 13 comments

Corporate globalization leaving developing nations hungry

Image
JanforGore
http;//www.thestar.com/news/globalvoices/article/742765--food-deals-leaving-developing-nations-hungry

In 2009, the World Food Programme imported humanitarian aid to about 5.9 million people in Sudan.

The conflict-stricken nation is one of the organization's largest projects. Civil war and ongoing violence have destroyed the country's infrastructure and uprooted its population. That makes sustenance farming virtually impossible and leaves millions facing starvation.

But as food aid stamped with the World Food Programme's logo is shipped to Sudan, thousands of tons of wheat and rice are shipped out.

This food won't end up on the world market. It has specific destinations: Riyadh, Beijing and Seoul to name a few. That's because 840,000 hectares of Sudanese farmland is currently leased to the governments of Saudi Arabia, China and South Korea. They use it for the sole purpose of feeding their growing populations.

Still, Sudan isn't able to feed itself.

"We have millions of acres of land, very flat and unspoiled and it hasn't really been even explored yet," Sudan's Minister of Finance Tarek Shalabi told Bloomberg in December. "Sudan is a very good place for agricultural investment."

Land grabbing, as it's called by opponents, is a new phenomenon. Since 2007, the Gulf States as well as wealthy Asian nations have bought land across the developing world to grow food staples and ship home. But, many of the countries from which they are buying are not food secure themselves.

The trend grew out of the food crisis. When commodity prices soared, arid nations in the Middle East and countries with large populations began searching for cheaper imports.

"They lost faith in the international market's ability to take care of food," says Devlin Kuyek, a researcher with GRAIN, a non-profit that supports small-scale farmers. "They took a more aggressive approach by looking for ways to buy up farmland for their own food needs."

Through government-backed corporations and sovereign wealth funds, the World Bank estimates 50 million hectares have been bought for food production. That's roughly equivalent to half of China's farmland. The deals are private so details are difficult to identify. But, most acquisitions are long-term leases, concessions or outright purchases ranging in length from 30 to 99 years.

China and the United Arab Emirates have already secured deals with the Democratic Republic of Congo and Senegal respectively. In Sept., Ethiopia announced three million hectares were for lease.

But, with Congo facing widespread unrest, 20 percent of the Senegalese population officially hungry and 13.7 million Ethiopians in need of emergency food aid, many fear these backroom deals will exacerbate the problem.

"In those places where we've seen the deals going forward, there has been displacement, loss of access to pastoral lands," says Kuyek. "And the jobs these companies are creating have been extremely low paid. They are under some of worst conditions in the world."

GRAIN estimates workers at an Ethiopian farm owned by Indian producers make 70 cents per day. Local farmers have lost their grazing and farm land. Their protests have been put down by police.

"There is a lot of manipulation and zero consultation," says Kuyek. "It goes contrary to any notion of food security and what's good for the local population."

end of excerpt
  1. groups:
    Community,   News and Politics,   Green,   Sustainable Agriculture,   1 more
  2. tags:
    Climate Change Greed Globalization World Bank 10 more
  3.     
    |

13 comments // Corporate globalization leaving developing nations hungry

  • iknew
    • 0
      iknew  
    • I understand the poor lifestyles these people have to live and there hardships they go through everyday, but as some people are better off than others and even if it's not by much... they still own their land and they can do with it whatever they want, it's capitlism. Although, the gov't. side could do a bit more to subsidize some of these acres for their own peoples use. And if the got any flack for it, put it under the guise of being owned by a big corpo. or some other rich country and just ship it to your own warehouses and redistributeto your people in trucks marked from other countries...!! Tht way people get fed, you make your own money and then boom... Your on the way to Economic sovereignty

    • 2 years ago
  • ibrake4rappers13
    • -1
      ibrake4rappers13  
    • "DO YOU SEE SUPPORT OF WORLD GOVERNANCE IN ANY OF MY POSTS?"

      Jan that video above showed that Al Gore wants to solve global warming through global governance, the very thing youre opposing in this thread.

    • 2 years ago
  • JanforGore
  • Patrick_Clarkson
    • 0
      Patrick_Clarkson  
    • The food aid racket is thriving. The amount of food being pumped into these banana republics is not enough to relieve the need but it is enough to perpetuate the aid dependency. Sudan suffers from a corrupt government and an out of control population surge. Instead of vilifying offshore farming operations, these should be encouraged but with a share cropping component - two thirds for export and one third for the use of the land for domestic consumption. Sustenance farming is not the answer and the proponents of this policy are not helping.
      http://www.topnflnews.com/

    • 2 years ago
  • ibrake4rappers13
  • JanforGore
  • ibrake4rappers13
  • JanforGore
    • 0
      JanforGore  
    • DO YOU SEE SUPPORT OF WORLD GOVERNANCE IN ANY OF MY POSTS? Do you think those calling for sustainable agriculture and food sovereignty are in some NWO? How dumb are you? Please stop posting this redundant BS in every thread. You should be standing up to do all in your power to help mitigate global warming by supporting sustainable agriculture and renewable energy because it is simply BETTER FOR THIS PLANET and our future, but it is obvious you just don't get it.

    • 2 years ago
  • unclepete813
    • 0
      unclepete813  
    • its funny how a place is call a developing nation, when that place had a civilization way before the cavemen or barbarics came from europe and destroyed it and rape it for its resources. then try to convert them to mental slavery with that bible. This is some mess up stuff and its back by the Vatican/queen. These are the evilest people in the world. The truth it is what it is, and they doing the same thing all around the world. Just go and carve up countries and try to say the people are terrorist. I cant wait till this age is dead and the earth cleanse itself of all the evil people. and thats around the corner. peace out.

    • 2 years ago
  • ibrake4rappers13
  • ibrake4rappers13
  • JanforGore
  • JanforGore
    • 0
      JanforGore  
    • Makes you wonder just how much of the socalled "food crisis" was contrived by these economic brokers to concentrate ownership of food access just like the bank bailout was to concentrate wealth. This also throws water on the cry of industrial agriculture that we need GMOs to feed the world. We need food ACCESS for all and food SOVEREIGNTY to feed the world. And that can be done adequately with organic sustainable farming while maintaining soil carbon, nutrients, and sustainable yields over time as opposed to pesticide ridden unguaranteed monoculture results that only deem to fatten the wallets of land grabbing countries and multinationals.

    • 2 years ago
more from Community:

top videos