Corporate Candy rots your teeth and genes ? - Plunder Capos land grab.

Corporate Candy rots your teeth and genes ? Premature diabetes, chronic in indigenous communities etc do we need yet another reason to eat less or no sugar ? (Monoculture on large farms in Oz has already farked the soil & water....) The same Corporate crooks who caused the Great Financial Crisis are now globally grabbing the land from the poor (indigenous, peasants, broke farmers..) and scheming for fuels to replace peaked oil, GM sugar cane is one more example.

Australia to help develop GM sugar cane Thursday, 12/11/2009 Australia's sugar industry has just struck a deal to develop the world's first fully commercialised genetically modified sugar cane varieties. A joint venture company between sugar research body BSES and international crop protection giant DuPont aims to have GM cane in the ground in Australia by 2016.

The move is a clear indicator the local industry is desperate to maintain its competitiveness in a sugar world dominated by Brazil. The deal will give Australian cane growers and millers access to DuPont's GM technology and experience in approving and commercialising GM crops, while DuPont gets to sell the rights worldwide. The new varieties are expected to cost 55 cents per tonne at the farm, and there are already grumbles as to how that cost will be shared between growers and millers. There are also concerns about consumer resistance to the sugar that comes from GM cane. http://www.abc.net.au/rural/news/content/200911/s2740741.htm

more: http://www.lifescientist.com.au/article/130671/gm_research_heads_warmer_climes

In Australia, where both Dow and Syngenta are collaborating with leading public research institutes on GM sugar cane, the sugar industry has already formed ... http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=589

ETC Group, “Commodifying Nature’s Last Straw? Extreme Genetic Engineering and the Post-Petroleum Sugar Economy”, October 2008, http://tinyurl.com/dagctq

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Last year’s elephant in the room at the FAO’s World Summit on Food Security was the outrageous profits corporate agribusiness was amassing during the peak of the global food crisis, while over a billion people went hungry. This year it is the global farmland grab. Investors are colluding with governments to take control of tens of millions of hectares of prime farmland in Asia, Africa and Latin America. Governments pushing these deals, such as Saudi Arabia or South Korea, see outsourced food production as a new strategy to feed their own people without relying on international trade.

Private investors see agricultural land in emerging economies as a new source of guaranteed returns in light of ongoing high food prices. Either way, this farmland grab is turning the food crisis into an opportunity for even more profits as the expansion of export-oriented agribusiness is at the heart of it. More than $100 billion is on the table, and over 40 million hectares have already been acquired from Ethiopia to Indonesia.

Small scale farmers are losing critical access to land and water, and local communities will be further cut off from access to food. Yet they are usually kept completely in the dark about these deals, without any involvement in the decisions that affect lands they have cultivated for generations. The implications for the global food system are dramatic. For farmers organisations and social movements converging in Rome, this global land grab is unacceptable. It has nothing to do with strengthening family farming and local markets, which in our view is the only way forward to achieve food systems that actually feed people. It must be stopped.

The “win-win” land grab scenarios that will be proposed to governments at the official FAO Summit are dangerous and unrealistic. Of course we need investment. But investment in food sovereignty, in a million local markets and in the four billion rural people who currently produce most of the food that our societies rely on -- not in a few mega-farms controlled by a few mega-landlords. From 13-17 November 2009, representatives from peasant organisations and social movements that have been directly involved in struggles against this new wave of global land grabbing will be in Rome.

NGOs and activist groups that have conducted extensive research and analysis of the issue will also be present. This is an excellent opportunity for media to speak with people directly involved in this fight. On 16 November, a specialised briefing and a symbolic action on the global land grab will be conducted for media by Via Campesina and GRAIN. S

peakers at the press conference: Ms Renée Velvée (GRAIN), Mr Mugi Ramanu (Indonesian Peasant's Union), Mr Ralava Beboarimisa (Collectif pour la défense des terres malgaches) Moderator: Ms Nettie Wiebe (La Via Camepsina) Media contacts (English, French, Spanish): • Mr Devlin Kuyek (GRAIN): +39 3490657014 (Nov 13-17) www.grain.org and farmlandgrab.org • Ms Annelies Schorpion (Via Campesina): +39 3312861096 (Nov 12-18) www.viacampesina.org

La Via Campesina is an international movement which brings together millions of peasants, small producers, landless people, rural women and agricultural workers around the world. Our movement is made up of 148 member organisations active in 69 countries in Asia, Africa, Europe and the Americas. GRAIN is a small international non-profit organisation that works to support small farmers and social movements in their struggles for community-controlled and biodiversity-based food systems.

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La Via Campesina - International Secretariat: Jln. Mampang Prapatan XIV No. 5 Jakarta Selatan, Jakarta 12790 Indonesia Phone : +62-21-7991890, Fax : +62-21-7993426 E-mail: viacampesina@viacampesina.org, Website: http://www.viacampesina.org +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ The following is a list of websites which use LabourStart's newswires -- an easy and free way to add current labour news and campaigns to your trade union website. http://www.labourstart.org/cgi-bin/show_lnwgn.pl