Paraguayan farmers occupy Brazilian owned farms to block entry of genetically modified soy
source: http://www.organicconsumers.org/articles/article_15097.cfm
-
-
- JanforGore
- added this
Some 120 campesinos occupied two 600-hectare (1,480 acre) farms, according to local media reports.
Cristino Peralta, the San Pedro correspondent of the daily ABC Color, said that the farmers immediately began planting the sesame and yucca after occupying the plantations.
"There was no law enforcement intervention," he said. "The group's leader Florencio Martinez said that the occupation marked the start of the recovery of Paraguayan territorial sovereignty."
San Pedro is considered Paraguay's best farmland, but it is also the country's poorest department. President Fernando Lugo worked as a bishop there for a decade.
Land is concentrated in the fewest hands in Paraguay than in any other Latin American country. Only 351 landowners hold 9.7 million hectares (24 million acres), while, according to civil society organizations, there are more than 350,000 families with insufficient quantities of land or no land at all.
The demonstrators said that they took over the Brazilian-owned plantations in protest of what they called the government's failure to implement land reform. Paraguay has also seen other campesino protests against transgenic soy plantations and the indiscriminate use of farming chemicals.
Lugo had requested that the campesinos give his government 100 days starting Aug. 15 to seek financing for land reform. The period ends on Nov. 22.
According to campesino leader Elvio Benitez, the government "continues without finding a solution to the lack of land of thousands of our compatriots, while the Brazilian's presence is getting bigger and bigger. We can't do anything else but occupy the Brazilian-owned haciendas because the soy crops are causing deforestation, eliminating natural forests and contaminating people with its pesticides."
-Latinamerica Press
_______________
People are standing up worldwide to the hoax that is GM food. We have enough conventional NATURAL food to feed the people of this planet. Good to see people standing up to the fake unnatural test tube food these mutli nationals are trying to shove down their throats for profit.
-
- groups:
- News and Politics, Green, Earth and Science
-
- recommended by:
- goldenways,
- Vierotchka
-
-
jubal
-
Americans need to be willing to sacrifice comfort for freedom.
- 3 years ago
-
jubal
-
-
krush_productions
-
give em hell!
- 3 years ago
-
krush_productions
-
-
JanforGore
-
American farmers: Are you watching? Stand up for your right to grow the food you wish to grow and food whose seeds you can replant as has been the tradition in agriculture for centuries.
- 3 years ago
-
JanforGore
-
-
darkhorsejim
-
These are very brave farmers. They may even be at risk of losing their land if they don't produce, yet willing to stand up to The Man & not sell out-all in the name of growing healthy crops.
This is the perfect example to set for other farmers who may be in a similar predicament & set the tone for the future-that globally, consumers are demanding healthier food options by any means necessary.
- 3 years ago
-
darkhorsejim
-
-
3oc
-
I find it interesting that these farmers, who probably have never seen the Internet, know more about the dangers of GMO's than most people in technologically enabled countries like the US.
All GM food should be banned and boycotted.
If no one bought it there wouldn't be a market.
- 3 years ago
-
3oc
-
-
HiddenAgenda
-
WOOOO!!
- 3 years ago
-
HiddenAgenda
-
-
onechance
-
REVOLUTION!!!!!!!!!
- 3 years ago
-
onechance
-
-
tokomoe
-
Hooray for GMO's!!!
- 3 years ago
-
tokomoe
-
-
SeaJade
-
Thanking these people willing to stand up and say no to GMO's!
- 3 years ago
-
SeaJade
-
-
JanforGore
-
The people have reason to protest. LIke other countries, Brazil's government has gone against their will regarding GMOs.
- 3 years ago
-
JanforGore
