What has been the discussion in Korea about the Daewoo/Madagascar
deal? What do people know about it and what are their basic
reactions?
Most people in Korea are not informed of the Daewoo/Madagascar deal because
the Korean media haven't paid much attention to it. I myself didn’t know what
happened until GRAIN asked us about it. Since then, I realised what was
happening in the country.
About the Korean people’s reaction, almost all people have an attitude of
acceptance toward the Lee Myung-Bak administration’s policy to secure the food
base of Korea in foreign countries. They already know that there are food
security issues in other countries because of the reports of riots in the
streets in Africa and elsewhere. The idea is to have access to cheap food,
especially animal feed for livestock, in other countries. Almost all people
accept it. The reason for this is that the media spin the issue this way.
The Korean government has an active policy of supporting Korean
corportations like LG, Hanwa and others to go farming abroad to provide for
domestic needs. How do Korean farmers assess this kind of strategy to achieve
"food security"?
The food self-sufficiency rate in Korea, including rice, is about 25%. If you
exclude rice, we import 95% of our food. So, it’s true, the self-sufficiency
rate is very low, and the farmers and farmers’ organizations argue that we need
to raise the self-sufficiency rate.
This food self-sufficiency rate is what the government uses to justify its
policy on farming abroad. And instead of developing good quality land for
farming in Korea, the government is giving what land we have to industrial
development: for buildings and for industrial complexes. It is also reclaiming
coastal lands for industrial use. So the government's argument is contradictory.
We have low food self-sufficiency but instead of developing land for farming,
they give the land to industrial use.
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"The Korean government's argument is contradictory. We have
low food self-sufficiency but instead of developing land for farming, they give
the land to industrial use." |
To overcome this contradiction, the government should think of how to secure
self-sufficiency in Korea instead of overseas farming and the Korean government
has to work together with farmers side-by-side. But the Korean government has
not done this. Even this year, 2008, our food self-sufficiency rate went down.
But if you went out to the farms, you would see that farmers stopped harvesting
and left produce rotting in the field because they could not make ends meet and
failed to find a market to sell to. So the farmers' organisations argue that
farming abroad is not the answer to food insecurity. The answer is raising the
food self-sufficiency rate domestically. It’s a strong issue right now.
How does this struggle around "food self-sufficiency" and "food
security" relate to the broader struggle for "food sovereignty" that groups like
KWPA and the Korean Peasant League are engaged in?
Before Via Campesina started advocating for food sovereignty, the Korean
farmers organisations were focused on national food security. We thought we
needed to prepare for a time when food could be used as a weapon. That is what
we argued during the struggle against the GATT Uruguay Round. And that is what
we saw this year, when we experienced the food crisis: countries cut off their
food exports. Even though we had money, we could not buy food, and this kind of
situation could get worse. That's why the international institutions tried to
stop the export restrictions.
In fact, it's really important that people can access safe food. That's real
food security, that's people's right to food. We depend on overseas, not only
for food but for farm equipment, oil supplies and seeds. How to cut this
overseas dependence and how to maintain the people's right to food: the
government has to deal with this. Otherwise, farmers cannot produce safe food.
So the government has to protect the farmers' right to produce. That's food
sovereignty. And the first step is to increase our self-sufficiency rate.
For example, KWPA is conducting a campaign to recover native seeds, which
have been lost throughout Korea. Traditional varieties are a good method to
raise the self-sufficiency rate and preserving them is a way to cut off GM food
and reduce overseas dependency. The campaign on native seeds increases
biodiversity at the local level and provides the basis for self-sufficiency and
it increases women farmers' rights.
Do you think that through the Daewoo deal, and others, Korea will be
pushing a bad agricultural production model on other countries? What impact will
it have on farmers there, for example in Madagascar?
Since the 1960s and the green revolution, for less than 40 years, Korean
farmers have had to adapt their farms or leave the land. Since then, Korean
farmers entered into capitalized agriculture and produced for commodity chains,
and we went into debt. And even though most Korean farmers farm their land, it
is used as collateral for loans. Or some farm on the land of absentee landlords.
It is like being an agricultural worker. And farmers cannot live with only
incomes from farming, so they have to do two or three side jobs.
That is our situation. Probably the same will be true of people in Madagascar
with the Daewoo deal. But while we were subjected to hybrid seeds, in Madagascar
they probably have to face GMOs. And they will have monoculture plantations. And
there is no way that the Daewoo/Madagascar deal will increase jobs. Daewoo has
already said that it would hire people from other countries to work the land to
take advantage of lower wages. So this deal will not create employment in
Madagascar.
We, the farmers, did not create this situation, but it looks like we
are passing our problems to others. So we feel guilty for the farmers in
Madagascar as we can expect that it will have a bad impact on them. I want them
to stop, so that people don't face this situation any more and suffer from TNCs.
We cannot live with our rights violated like this. We should deny and resist.
But in Korea, farmers are used to targetting the government. Like when we
struggled against the Korea-Chile FTA, we targetted the two governments, not the
private capitalists. We are not used to targetting the corporations, as
industrial workers are. So now, the farmers movement has to change and target
transnational capital.
|
"We, the farmers, did not create this situation, but it
looks like we are passing our problems to others. So we feel guilty for the
farmers in Madagascar as we can expect that it will have a bad impact on them.
" |
The Daewoo/Madagascar deal is just one of many that Korean firms, and
the government, are involved in. And many other countries and investors are
doing the same. Given that it's a bigger problem, what do you think should be
done? What would you say to Daewoo if you could tell them
something?
It’s a really tough question. The answer depends on our level of preparation.
Actually, the background of Daewoo's investment is Lee Myung-Bak's policy.
This policy for farming abroad was considered and abolished in the past, but Lee
Myung-Bak restored this policy to support overseas farm investment. It's now
national policy. So right now, not only Daewoo but many other Korean TNCs are
going around trying to find appropriate land for food production in foreign
countries. I would ask the Lee Myung-Bak government and the TNCs whether growing
food overseas is really a good way to provide for Korean people's right to food!
As we saw this year, with the candlelight vigil protest against US beef and the
melamine scandal, importing food is not always safe. So we oppose overseas
production and have to make our own production systems in the rural area, for
sustainable agriculture. Also, we are asking companies not to transport food all
over the world. In the 1970s, the Korean government tried to find candidate
lands for food production abroad. But they were really remote and this posed a
problem of transportation. That’s why this policy was abolished in the past. But
right now, the Lee Myung Bak government is trying to revitalise it. The reason
that they now develop overseas production is not for food security but for their
own self-interest. They make an excuse of food security; it's not the real
reason.
What we can do now is inform the people and the government that this kind of
farming abroad is not for people, it's for the TNCs. We have to help people see
this real picture.
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"They make an excuse of food security; it's not the real
reason." |
Is this boom in overseas farm acquisitions something that KWPA and
other farmers' groups will be getting more active on?
It is really bad for Korean companies like Daewoo to occupy the land of
foreign peoples like neocolonialists. Daewoo is bound to earn the same
reputation as Monsanto or Cargill from such practices.
The first thing we can do right now is develop an internal position between
KWPA and the Korean Peasant League about the Lee Myung-Bak government's overseas
farming policy. We also have to make a statement on that.
Secondly, since Daewoo and other Korean companies are expanding such
investments in Africa, Southeast Asia and Central Asia, we have to prepare a
joint statement with farmers from Asia and Africa who are suffering from these
kinds of deals.
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"It is really bad for Korean companies like Daewoo to occupy
the land of foreign peoples like neocolonialists. Daewoo is bound to earn the
same reputation as Monsanto or Cargill from such practices." |
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