Tanzania Forced To Embrace Seed Patents Or Risk Losing Developmental Aid

selemala

JF-Expert Member
Feb 14, 2007
370
253
source: Tanzania Forced To Embrace Seed Patents Or Risk Losing Developmental Aid

Jamani hii kitu imekaaje, mnaoelewa haya mambo na lugha mtusaidie kueelewa. Maana inaonekana kama tumelazimishwa kukubali matakwa yasiyo nafaida kwetu ili tupewe misaada.
- Je hizi sheria zimebadilishwa lini?
- Je ndio tumeamia kwenye kugawa ardhi? - hatujifunzi ya Zimbabwe, SA au hata Kenya.

Nisiandike sana, labda mimi ndio sijaelewa.


Tanzania Forced To Embrace Seed Patents Or Risk Losing Developmental Aid
Agribusiness companies are taking advantage of Tanzania’s desperate need for aid to push a development plan that will allow them to dominate the country’s agriculture sector and plunge farmers into debt. A similar plan led to a suicide epidemic among Indian farmers in recent years.

By Whitney Webb | Follow on Facebook | | June 13, 2017


MINNEAPOLIS–
A “development assistance” initiative launched five years ago by the G8, an inter-governmental political forum of the world’s most industrialized nations that consider themselves democracies, is holding Tanzania hostage to the benefit of agribusiness and the detriment of small-scale Tanzanian farmers.

The New Alliance for Food Security and Nutrition (NAFSN), founded by the G8 in 2012 to ostensibly end hunger and poverty for 50 million people, has forced the Tanzanian government to amend its laws to drastically favor agribusiness and seed companies if it wishes to continue receiving developmental assistance aid. Monsanto, one of the NAFSN’s partners in Tanzania, is set to benefit from these changes to Tanzania’s laws.

The NAFSN is funded by the EU, the U.S., the UK, the World Bank and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The alliance had secured approximately $3.7 billion in private sector investment in signatory countries in Africa as of June 2012, a figure which is said to have since expanded, though no new figures have been released.

While the NAFSN was supposed to benefit small-scale farmers, local farming organizations were shut out of negotiations, while agribusiness lobbyists had unprecedented access to those drafting the requirements of signatory countries seeking developmental assistance. Tanzania’s government, which administers one of the world’s least developed countries, was desperate for the aid. Due to this economic pressure, the Tanzanian legislature obliged.

Per the new legislation, foreign commercial investors would be given faster and easier access to agricultural land in the African nation, as well as strong protections for “intellectual property rights,” e.g., seed patenting. Patented seeds, largely the products of behemoth seed companies like Monsanto and Syngenta, often pop up in neighboring farms that use traditional seeds via cross-pollination, a phenomenon that has been used by Monsanto and similar companies to sue small-scale farmers for “stealing” their intellectual property.

In addition, seeds that are not patented – i.e., all seeds traditionally used by Tanzanian farmers – are now forbidden from being sold or even given to friends or family, threatening the centuries-old tradition of seed exchanges that have kept costs down for farmers. Michael Farrelly of the Tanzania Organic Agriculture Movement (TOAM) told Mondiaal Nieuws that “Eighty percent of the seeds are being shared and sold in an informal system between neighbors, friends and family. The new law criminalizes the practice in Tanzania.”

If Tanzanian farmers break the new law barring seed exchange, they face a minimum prison sentence of 12 years, a $230,000 fine, or both. Considering that the average wage in Tanzania is less than $2 a day, the punishment seems rather draconian, considering the nature of the “crime.”

However, the new laws themselves are likely illegal under international law, as Article 9 of the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture (ITPGRFA), also known as the “Seed Treaty,” states that no law should “limit any rights that farmers have to save, use, exchange and sell farm-saved seed/propagating material.” But affected Tanzanian farmers will likely be unable to make a viable court case against the new legislation due to their limited economic resources.

Farrelly argued that these recent actions show that the NAFSN’s lofty promises to help end poverty come with a catch. “In practice, it means that the fifty million people that the New Alliance wants to help can escape from poverty and hunger only if they buy seeds every year from the companies that are standing behind the G8.”

The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, one of the NAFSN’s funding partners, is particularly well-known for pushing the interests of big agribusiness on small-scale farmers in developing countries, as evidenced by one of the Gates Foundation’s “most successful” initiatives – the introduction of genetically modified (GM) cotton to India. Despite the promise that GM cotton would increase yields, this turned out not to be the case and Indian farmers who adopted the GM crops became trapped by debt, as their disappointing yields left them unable to pay for the expensive seeds and chemicals needed to cultivate GM plants.

This debt slavery soon led to one of the largest suicide epidemics in global history, with 300,000 Indian farmers having committed suicide over the last 20 years. Despite this travesty, Monsanto and other companies, such as Cargill and Dow Chemical, have benefited handsomely from India’s “green revolution,” seeing the value of their stocks skyrocket. The Gates Foundation itself has financially benefited as well due to its multi-million dollar investments in all three companies.

If the new laws being forced on Tanzania are any indication, the African nation may soon follow in India’s footsteps.
 
Sio kugawa ardhi tu mkuu bali kulazimishwa kutumia mbegu za hawa jamaa na kuachana na mbegu zetu za asili. Kwa nilivyoelewa, itakuwa kosa kisheria kwa mkulima kule kijijini kutotumia mbegu za kisasa (GMOs) za haya makampuni. Na hii yaweza kusababisha kifungo kwa muhusika. Binafsi ni heri tukose misaada yao kuliko kukubali huu upuuzi.
 
Niliwahi kuona Monsato wanavyowalazimisha wakulima wa marekani kununua mbegu zao.

Hii ikija Tanzania wakulima wengi watakimbia mashamba yao.
 
Sio kugawa ardhi tu mkuu bali kulazimishwa kutumia mbegu za hawa jamaa na kuachana na mbegu zetu za asili. Kwa nilivyoelewa, itakuwa kosa kisheria kwa mkulima kule kijijini kutotumia mbegu za kisasa (GMOs) za haya makampuni. Na hii yaweza kusababisha kifungo kwa muhusika. Binafsi ni heri tukose misaada yao kuliko kukubali huu upuuzi.

Asante kwa ufafanuzi mkuu.

Du! kumbe ni mbaya kuliko nilivyodhani. Sitaki kuamini kuwa itabidi tusubiri aje kiongozi mwingine aunde tume ya kuchunguzi na hili pia.

Waziri wa kilimo ... Hon. Dr. Charles John Tizeba, tunaomba ufafanuzi kuhusu hili.
 
Ndiyo mambo ya kijinga haya kuingia mikataba sababu ya misaada. Msaada wenyewe bilion mbili
 
Niliwahi kuona Monsato wanavyowalazimisha wakulima wa marekani kununua mbegu zao.

Hii ikija Tanzania wakulima wengi watakimbia mashamba yao.
Asante kwa ufafanuzi mkuu.

Du! kumbe ni mbaya kuliko nilivyodhani. Sitaki kuamini kuwa itabidi tusubiri aje kiongozi mwingine aunde tume ya kuchunguzi na hili pia.

Waziri wa kilimo ... Hon. Dr. Charles John Tizeba, tunaomba ufafanuzi kuhusu hili.
Ndio hivyo mkuu, sheria hizi zikipita bibi zetu kule kijijini hawataruhusiwa kuhifadhi na kutumia mbegu zao za asili, bali za hao jamaa tu basi. Maana yake kila mwaka lazima wanunue mbegu mpya kutoka kwa makampuni ya hao jamaa.
 
Pharmaceutical wameshachukua soko la dunia kilichobaki ni chakula na Africa ni potential. Hakuna Mkulima Tanzania ataweza kulima hapo ndio utakuwa mwisho wa mtu mweusi.
 
Wapumbavu sana hawa mabeberu, waanze na wakulima wa Marekani, UK, china, Japan au Italy au ujerumani, kwani sisi tunashindwa kuanzisha mfuko wa "Kilimo" kuwasaidia wakulima wetu? kisa vipesa vyao hivyo???
 
Wapumbavu sana hawa mabeberu, waanze na wakulima wa Marekani, UK, china, Japan au Italy au ujerumani, kwani sisi tunashindwa kuanzisha mfuko wa "Kilimo" kuwasaidia wakulima wetu? kisa vipesa vyao hivyo???
Ikiwa hili jambo linaihusu ccm kulipitisha ama kulikataa (bungeni) basi tujiandae kwa kilio, nina maana andaeni machozi.
Tukishalia sanaaaa ndio anajitokeza magufuli wa wakati huo eti anakukomboa.
Ccm wameshamzidi shetani kiutendaji.
 
Ukisikia ubeberu ndiyo huu, hizi mbegu siyo nzuri kiafya wanachotaka ni kupunguza idadi ya watu duniani na kupunguza umri wa kuishi, mbegu toka lini zikatengenezwa kiwandani
 
Wakati mwingine natamani Nyerere angekuwa hai, wangefuatwa huko huko kwao na somo wangelielewa. Hizi ndio mzee kwa watu weupe hazina mipaka sasa.
 
Ikiwa hili jambo linaihusu ccm kulipitisha ama kulikataa (bungeni) basi tujiandae kwa kilio, nina maana andaeni machozi.
Tukishalia sanaaaa ndio anajitokeza magufuli wa wakati huo eti anakukomboa.
Ccm wameshamzidi shetani kiutendaji.

Katokana na hii taarifa ni kuwa tumesha saini.

"Tanzania’s government, which administers one of the world’s least developed countries, was desperate for the aid. Due to this economic pressure, the Tanzanian legislature obliged. "

Lakini binafisi sijasikia hii kitu ikijadiliwa bungeni, ingawa taarifa inasema bunge limepitisha.
 
source: Tanzania Forced To Embrace Seed Patents Or Risk Losing Developmental Aid

Jamani hii kitu imekaaje, mnaoelewa haya mambo na lugha mtusaidie kueelewa. Maana inaonekana kama tumelazimishwa kukubali matakwa yasiyo nafaida kwetu ili tupewe misaada.
- Je hizi sheria zimebadilishwa lini?
- Je ndio tumeamia kwenye kugawa ardhi? - hatujifunzi ya Zimbabwe, SA au hata Kenya.

Nisiandike sana, labda mimi ndio sijaelewa.


Tanzania Forced To Embrace Seed Patents Or Risk Losing Developmental Aid
Agribusiness companies are taking advantage of Tanzania’s desperate need for aid to push a development plan that will allow them to dominate the country’s agriculture sector and plunge farmers into debt. A similar plan led to a suicide epidemic among Indian farmers in recent years.

By Whitney Webb | Follow on Facebook | | June 13, 2017


MINNEAPOLIS–
A “development assistance” initiative launched five years ago by the G8, an inter-governmental political forum of the world’s most industrialized nations that consider themselves democracies, is holding Tanzania hostage to the benefit of agribusiness and the detriment of small-scale Tanzanian farmers.

The New Alliance for Food Security and Nutrition (NAFSN), founded by the G8 in 2012 to ostensibly end hunger and poverty for 50 million people, has forced the Tanzanian government to amend its laws to drastically favor agribusiness and seed companies if it wishes to continue receiving developmental assistance aid. Monsanto, one of the NAFSN’s partners in Tanzania, is set to benefit from these changes to Tanzania’s laws.

The NAFSN is funded by the EU, the U.S., the UK, the World Bank and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The alliance had secured approximately $3.7 billion in private sector investment in signatory countries in Africa as of June 2012, a figure which is said to have since expanded, though no new figures have been released.

While the NAFSN was supposed to benefit small-scale farmers, local farming organizations were shut out of negotiations, while agribusiness lobbyists had unprecedented access to those drafting the requirements of signatory countries seeking developmental assistance. Tanzania’s government, which administers one of the world’s least developed countries, was desperate for the aid. Due to this economic pressure, the Tanzanian legislature obliged.

Per the new legislation, foreign commercial investors would be given faster and easier access to agricultural land in the African nation, as well as strong protections for “intellectual property rights,” e.g., seed patenting. Patented seeds, largely the products of behemoth seed companies like Monsanto and Syngenta, often pop up in neighboring farms that use traditional seeds via cross-pollination, a phenomenon that has been used by Monsanto and similar companies to sue small-scale farmers for “stealing” their intellectual property.

In addition, seeds that are not patented – i.e., all seeds traditionally used by Tanzanian farmers – are now forbidden from being sold or even given to friends or family, threatening the centuries-old tradition of seed exchanges that have kept costs down for farmers. Michael Farrelly of the Tanzania Organic Agriculture Movement (TOAM) told Mondiaal Nieuws that “Eighty percent of the seeds are being shared and sold in an informal system between neighbors, friends and family. The new law criminalizes the practice in Tanzania.”

If Tanzanian farmers break the new law barring seed exchange, they face a minimum prison sentence of 12 years, a $230,000 fine, or both. Considering that the average wage in Tanzania is less than $2 a day, the punishment seems rather draconian, considering the nature of the “crime.”

However, the new laws themselves are likely illegal under international law, as Article 9 of the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture (ITPGRFA), also known as the “Seed Treaty,” states that no law should “limit any rights that farmers have to save, use, exchange and sell farm-saved seed/propagating material.” But affected Tanzanian farmers will likely be unable to make a viable court case against the new legislation due to their limited economic resources.

Farrelly argued that these recent actions show that the NAFSN’s lofty promises to help end poverty come with a catch. “In practice, it means that the fifty million people that the New Alliance wants to help can escape from poverty and hunger only if they buy seeds every year from the companies that are standing behind the G8.”

The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, one of the NAFSN’s funding partners, is particularly well-known for pushing the interests of big agribusiness on small-scale farmers in developing countries, as evidenced by one of the Gates Foundation’s “most successful” initiatives – the introduction of genetically modified (GM) cotton to India. Despite the promise that GM cotton would increase yields, this turned out not to be the case and Indian farmers who adopted the GM crops became trapped by debt, as their disappointing yields left them unable to pay for the expensive seeds and chemicals needed to cultivate GM plants.

This debt slavery soon led to one of the largest suicide epidemics in global history, with 300,000 Indian farmers having committed suicide over the last 20 years. Despite this travesty, Monsanto and other companies, such as Cargill and Dow Chemical, have benefited handsomely from India’s “green revolution,” seeing the value of their stocks skyrocket. The Gates Foundation itself has financially benefited as well due to its multi-million dollar investments in all three companies.

If the new laws being forced on Tanzania are any indication, the African nation may soon follow in India’s footsteps.

IT'S THE NEW WORLD ORDER.....
DEPOPULATION THINK ABOUT IT.
Cancer, na magonjwa kibao yasiyoeleweka kutokana na mfumo lishe na maisha ya sasa. Politician wanatumaliza kutekeleza matakwa ya .... KESHENI MKIOMBA MAANA HAMJUI SIKU WALA SAA...
 
Katokana na hii taarifa ni kuwa tumesha saini.

"Tanzania’s government, which administers one of the world’s least developed countries, was desperate for the aid. Due to this economic pressure, the Tanzanian legislature obliged. "

Lakini binafisi sijasikia hii kitu ikijadiliwa bungeni, ingawa taarifa inasema bunge limepitisha.

Halima Mdee aliipigia kelele sana 22/05/2013 Ila Waziri wa Kilimo akasema kuwa haina Tatizo
Kenya wameipiga Marufuku

Huko Ulaya wameikataa maana hawana shida

Na Bill Gates anamiliki shares 500000
 
source: Tanzania Forced To Embrace Seed Patents Or Risk Losing Developmental Aid

Jamani hii kitu imekaaje, mnaoelewa haya mambo na lugha mtusaidie kueelewa. Maana inaonekana kama tumelazimishwa kukubali matakwa yasiyo nafaida kwetu ili tupewe misaada.
- Je hizi sheria zimebadilishwa lini?
- Je ndio tumeamia kwenye kugawa ardhi? - hatujifunzi ya Zimbabwe, SA au hata Kenya.

Nisiandike sana, labda mimi ndio sijaelewa.


Tanzania Forced To Embrace Seed Patents Or Risk Losing Developmental Aid
Agribusiness companies are taking advantage of Tanzania’s desperate need for aid to push a development plan that will allow them to dominate the country’s agriculture sector and plunge farmers into debt. A similar plan led to a suicide epidemic among Indian farmers in recent years.

By Whitney Webb | Follow on Facebook | | June 13, 2017


MINNEAPOLIS–
A “development assistance” initiative launched five years ago by the G8, an inter-governmental political forum of the world’s most industrialized nations that consider themselves democracies, is holding Tanzania hostage to the benefit of agribusiness and the detriment of small-scale Tanzanian farmers.

The New Alliance for Food Security and Nutrition (NAFSN), founded by the G8 in 2012 to ostensibly end hunger and poverty for 50 million people, has forced the Tanzanian government to amend its laws to drastically favor agribusiness and seed companies if it wishes to continue receiving developmental assistance aid. Monsanto, one of the NAFSN’s partners in Tanzania, is set to benefit from these changes to Tanzania’s laws.

The NAFSN is funded by the EU, the U.S., the UK, the World Bank and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The alliance had secured approximately $3.7 billion in private sector investment in signatory countries in Africa as of June 2012, a figure which is said to have since expanded, though no new figures have been released.

While the NAFSN was supposed to benefit small-scale farmers, local farming organizations were shut out of negotiations, while agribusiness lobbyists had unprecedented access to those drafting the requirements of signatory countries seeking developmental assistance. Tanzania’s government, which administers one of the world’s least developed countries, was desperate for the aid. Due to this economic pressure, the Tanzanian legislature obliged.

Per the new legislation, foreign commercial investors would be given faster and easier access to agricultural land in the African nation, as well as strong protections for “intellectual property rights,” e.g., seed patenting. Patented seeds, largely the products of behemoth seed companies like Monsanto and Syngenta, often pop up in neighboring farms that use traditional seeds via cross-pollination, a phenomenon that has been used by Monsanto and similar companies to sue small-scale farmers for “stealing” their intellectual property.

In addition, seeds that are not patented – i.e., all seeds traditionally used by Tanzanian farmers – are now forbidden from being sold or even given to friends or family, threatening the centuries-old tradition of seed exchanges that have kept costs down for farmers. Michael Farrelly of the Tanzania Organic Agriculture Movement (TOAM) told Mondiaal Nieuws that “Eighty percent of the seeds are being shared and sold in an informal system between neighbors, friends and family. The new law criminalizes the practice in Tanzania.”

If Tanzanian farmers break the new law barring seed exchange, they face a minimum prison sentence of 12 years, a $230,000 fine, or both. Considering that the average wage in Tanzania is less than $2 a day, the punishment seems rather draconian, considering the nature of the “crime.”

However, the new laws themselves are likely illegal under international law, as Article 9 of the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture (ITPGRFA), also known as the “Seed Treaty,” states that no law should “limit any rights that farmers have to save, use, exchange and sell farm-saved seed/propagating material.” But affected Tanzanian farmers will likely be unable to make a viable court case against the new legislation due to their limited economic resources.

Farrelly argued that these recent actions show that the NAFSN’s lofty promises to help end poverty come with a catch. “In practice, it means that the fifty million people that the New Alliance wants to help can escape from poverty and hunger only if they buy seeds every year from the companies that are standing behind the G8.”

The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, one of the NAFSN’s funding partners, is particularly well-known for pushing the interests of big agribusiness on small-scale farmers in developing countries, as evidenced by one of the Gates Foundation’s “most successful” initiatives – the introduction of genetically modified (GM) cotton to India. Despite the promise that GM cotton would increase yields, this turned out not to be the case and Indian farmers who adopted the GM crops became trapped by debt, as their disappointing yields left them unable to pay for the expensive seeds and chemicals needed to cultivate GM plants.

This debt slavery soon led to one of the largest suicide epidemics in global history, with 300,000 Indian farmers having committed suicide over the last 20 years. Despite this travesty, Monsanto and other companies, such as Cargill and Dow Chemical, have benefited handsomely from India’s “green revolution,” seeing the value of their stocks skyrocket. The Gates Foundation itself has financially benefited as well due to its multi-million dollar investments in all three companies.

If the new laws being forced on Tanzania are any indication, the African nation may soon follow in India’s footsteps.
HUU ndio ushenzi MAGUFULI anatakiwa kuufukuzilia mbali, waondoke na mbegu zao wakapande kwao.

MAGUFULI na wenzio MSITHUBUTU kuwaruhusu hao MONSANTO nchini. Hawa ni MAFIA mara bilioni zaidi ya hao ACACIA.

Narudia MSIJARIBU.
 
Asante kwa ufafanuzi mkuu.

Du! kumbe ni mbaya kuliko nilivyodhani. Sitaki kuamini kuwa itabidi tusubiri aje kiongozi mwingine aunde tume ya kuchunguzi na hili pia.

Waziri wa kilimo ... Hon. Dr. Charles John Tizeba, tunaomba ufafanuzi kuhusu hili.
Nani ana email ya huyu waziri? hili lifike upesi kwa wahusika, hii ni laana kuu kuliko laana zote kama tutawakubalia hawa washenzi wa GMO.
 
Halima Mdee aliipigia kelele sana 22/05/2013 Ila Waziri wa Kilimo akasema kuwa haina Tatizo
Kenya wameipiga Marufuku

Huko Ulaya wameikataa maana hawana shida

Na Bill Gates anamiliki shares 500000
9cc686c3cf5be862240d5e9c81999088.jpg
 
Halima Mdee aliipigia kelele sana 22/05/2013 Ila Waziri wa Kilimo akasema kuwa haina Tatizo
Kenya wameipiga Marufuku

Huko Ulaya wameikataa maana hawana shida

Na Bill Gates anamiliki shares 500000

Alafu watu wanamsifu mkulu kwa kuzuia bunge live wakati wanaingia mikataba ya kutulisha vyakula sumu.
 
Ikiwa hili jambo linaihusu ccm kulipitisha ama kulikataa (bungeni) basi tujiandae kwa kilio, nina maana andaeni machozi.
Tukishalia sanaaaa ndio anajitokeza magufuli wa wakati huo eti anakukomboa.
Ccm wameshamzidi shetani kiutendaji.

wale vichwa vyepesi wa CCM huwa hawajisumbui kusoma mswada, wao wanasubiri spika awaulize wanaoafiki waropoke ndiooo.
tumechagua kasuku.

Huu mswada anatakiwa aupige marufuku raisi, na awaambie wasirudi TENA. Huu ni MSWADA wa hovyo MNO.

Mara bilioni watuambie tupeleke MSWADA wa USHOGA bungeni lakini sio huu., ni kudhalilishana kulikopita kiasi.

ma-CCM huu ndio wakati wa kupigania nchi, sio mnasubiri msaini mikataba ya kishenzi, tena kimya kmya halafu baada ya miaka kadhaa mtuletee drama kama za madini na makinikia
 
Alafu watu wanamsifu mkulu kwa kuzuia bunge live wakati wanaingia mikataba ya kutulisha vyakula sumu.

Mtalishwa sumu na dawa watalazimisha mnunue kwao. MTAKUWA watumwa kamili. HIZO GMO hata wazungu wenzao ULAYA hawataki hata kuzisikia.
 
Back
Top Bottom