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The
New Seeds Bill aims to promote the seed industry and consolidate its control
over seeds by crushing farmers’ traditional rights. This move needs to be opposed,
as it would be disastrous for seed
and food
security and freedom of our farmers.
Afsar H. Jafri*
Mumbai,
November 2, 2006: A new law for seeds, which further liberalizes the seed
sector, may soon be a reality. The United Progressive Alliance (UPA)
government, elected with a mandate from rural India, is now determined to
provide unfettered market access to the multinational seeds industry such as
Monsanto to monopolise the seed sector and contaminate our diverse genetic
resources with genetically modified seeds. And this is being done at a time when
farmer suicides are escalating to crisis proportions. In the last 155 days in Vidarbha
in Maharashtra, (June-October 2006) 513[i]
farmers have committed suicides in comparison to 86 during the same period last
year. 438 farmers took their lives after Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s visit
to this region where genetically engineered Bt. Cotton had created massive
distress among cotton growers. The new Act is designed to promote and encourage
corporate controlled, expensive, highly unreliable and ecologically disastrous
genetically engineered seeds like Bt. cotton in India.
The
Departmental Parliamentary Standing Committee on Agriculture, under the
Chairmanship of Prof. Ram Gopal Yadav, has submitted its final report to the
Speaker of Lok Sabha on 20th October after discussing this bill in
6-7 sittings of the committee. The report is expected to be tabled in the house
in the coming Parliament session, starting on 22nd November 2006.
The Seeds Bill 2004[ii] was
introduced in the Upper House of the Parliament on 9th December 2004
and was later referred to the Parliamentary Committee for examination and
report. The Committee held its first meeting to hear
oral deposition from farmers, scientists and experts on 19th and 20th
June 2006 and a few subsequent hearings. So far no details are available from
the Agriculture Committee or the Speaker’s Office on the changes in the bill.
Apparently
the UPA government is under constant pressure from Multinational Corporations
(MNCs) like Monsanto, whose ominous presence in our government system has now
been legitimized as a Board Member (from US side) of the Indo-US Initiative on
Agriculture Research and Education, to get fast track clearance of the Seeds
Bill 2004.
The Seeds Bill 2004 can be termed
as Monsanto’s Seeds Bill because it seems to be drafted under pressure from
seed manufacturing companies like Monsanto. It is certain that a lobby of
multinational companies is behind the new Seeds Bill, as they see India as a
large and upcoming seed market worth several thousand crores. On the pretext of
increasing food production, the new Bill is drafted to benefit multinational
seed companies, as evident from its stated objective, outlined by the Union
Ministry of Agriculture, i.e. (i) to create facilitative climate for growth of seed
industry, (ii) enhance seed replacement rates for various crops and (iii) boost
the export of seeds and encourage import of useful germplasm, and (iv) create
conducive atmosphere for application of frontier sciences in varietal
development and for enhanced investment in research and development[iii].
The objectives and reasons for the Bill
also clearly state that the proposed legislation provides for increasing
private participation in seed production, distribution, certification and seed
testing[iv].
The objective to promote seed
industry and consolidate their control over seeds can be achieved only through
crushing farmers’ traditional rights over seed. Hence, several provisions in
this Bill deny Indian farmers their right over seeds. Therefore the Seeds Bill
2004, introduced by the UPA government, which professes to be greatly
supportive of farmers and their interests, is anti-farmer and benefits seed
corporations.
The objective of any model seeds
law should be to ensure seed security for farmers to provide equitable,
affordable and timely access to good quality agricultural seed of required
varieties and save farmers from dependency over seed companies for their seed
supply. The proposed legislation, however, denies farmers their seed security
and creates forced dependence on companies for seed, an essential
input for agriculture and the foundation for the food security of a country.
This Bill has therefore potential to spell doom for Indian farmers and farming.
The most controversial provision
of this Bill is that it requires mandatory registration of all seeds and
varieties (including farmers’ seeds) and prohibits use of unregistered seeds.
As per this provision every Indian farmers has to register their seeds with the
proposed national seeds authority and are entitled to use only registered
seeds. Moreover this Bill prevents barter or exchange of seeds among farmers
and curbs their fundamental right to save and exchange seeds. This is a “WTO
plus” provision which undoes the gains for farmers under the Plant Variety
Protection and Farmers Rights Act (PVPFRA) 2001. The PVPFR Act 2001 enacted
under the obligation of WTO recognizes this right. The Bill also infringes the
rights and freedom of farmers to grow and produce seeds, when it says, “no
producer shall grow or organize the production of seeds unless he is
registered”. Traditionally majority of Indian farmers generate the seeds for
the next crops from the produce of the present one. This customary right of
farmers to save, use, exchange and sell seeds is the foundation of our
agriculture systems.
Another anti farmer provision of
this Bill is that a farmer will be punished if s/he is found guilty of using,
exchanging or selling unregistered seeds. In this situation, the farmer may
attract punishment from Rs. 5000 which could go up to Rs. 25,000, including the
liability to be searched by the Seed Inspector, appointed by State Government,
who has been given powers to break open anyone’s door, enter his house and
search if he feels the proposed seeds act is being violated. In India where
farmers’ seeds are the main source of seeds and planting materials, such
criminalization of everyday activity of farming appears to be the intent of the
Bill mainly to dissuade farmers from using their own seeds and varieties and
become dependent on MNC seed supply. This also shows that instead of regulating
and punishing the seed industry for supply of spurious seeds, the proposed
legislation is aimed at policing the farmers and declaring them criminals if
they produce and sell their own seeds.
The provision for self
certification is another anti farmer provision. Along with the State Seed
Certification Agency, the accredited (by State Seed Committee) individual,
institutions and seed producing organisations are allowed to carry out
self-certification of their seeds. This means that a seed company can do
self-certification without any strict monitoring. Moreover the same company may
also be sitting in the Centre/ State Seed Committee which would be responsible
for inspection and monitoring.
Indian farmers have faced several
cases of seed failures since liberalisation and deregulation of the seed sector
and the most recent example is failure of 700 tonnes[v]
of Monsanto’s maize seeds “Cargill hybrid 900M” in over 140,000 acres in 11
districts of north Bihar during 2002-2003 but no punitive action was taken
against Monsanto. Even if the company is found guilty of self certifying its
seeds, withdrawal of their accreditation won’t be that easy. Therefore there
should be no representation of the seed companies in the proposed Central and
State Seed Committees.
The other
serious flaw in the new Seeds Bill is that it fails to establish any strict
liability on seed companies for failure of their seeds. In case of seed
failure, the victim farmers, who would lose their crop and their livelihood,
can only appeal for compensation under the local Consumer Court. If a farmer
has to look to Consumer Protection Act of 1986 for redress, then why do we need
a new seeds law? The failure of company seeds has become a general trend and
the non-renewability, non-reliability and high cost of company seeds have
created havoc in Indian agriculture and indebted farmers. Due to failure of
company’s seeds, several thousand Indian farmers have committed suicide and
many farmers were forced to sell their body organs to pay off their debts.
Despite this the new Seeds Bill is neither harsh in its punitive action against
the seed manufacturers nor it makes the government official liable for any of
their official omission.
However the
Indian bureaucracy has legally protected its interest under this bill, leaving
the millions of farmers at the mercy of the seeds industry. The Bill protects
government officials through its provision, which says "no suit, prosecution
or other legal proceeding shall lie against the government or any person for
anything which is in good faith done or intended to be done." It clearly
indicate that the UPA government wants only farmers to be regulated, monitored,
punished, while standing for the interests of the seed manufacturers and the
government officials. Interestingly the seed companies are advocating for crop
insurance therefore shifting their liability on the government who would bear
the cost of insurance in case of failure of company seeds.
The ill
intention of the Agriculture Ministry as well as UPA Government towards farmers
is further strengthened when they provided under the proposed Act for
representation of seeds companies (who should be regulated) as respectable
members in the proposed Central Seed Committee while allowing only two farmer
representatives, who will be nominated by the Centre Government, in the said
committee. When a non-farmer and well renowned scientist, Prof. MS Swaminathan,
was selected by the UPA Government to head the National Commission of Farmers,
therefore it is very doubtful that a farmer would ever get nominated to the
Centre/ State Seed Committees.
Ironically the new seeds
legislation is being legislated at a time when farmers’ suicides are rampant in
almost every state irrespective of the crop they grow. And one of the main
reasons of farmers’ suicides is increasing cost of production and consequent
indebtedness. In such distress agrarian situation the new Seeds Bill has come
with a stated objective of “increasing the seed replacement rate” which
obviously means farmers traditional seeds replaced with company seeds. In other
words farmer tested, biodiverse, affordable and reliable seeds to be replaced
with MNC's costly, uniform, monoculture, unreliable and self-certified seeds.
The forced replacement of traditional seeds by chemical responsive hybrid and
GM seeds would lead to the destruction of our biodiversity, increasing farmers’
vulnerability to climate change, floods, droughts and other environmental
disasters.
The proposed legislation also
fails to protect farmers from high prices of company seeds. If the Bill is
introduced with an intention to regulate seed companies, then the provision of
price regulation becomes obligatory, which is conspicuously missing in the new
Bill. This could result in a high cost of seeds fixed arbitrarily by the seed
companies, as the case of transgenic Bt. cotton. Moreover there is also no
provision on the limit of profit, which a seed company can make from a given
brand. Recently the Government of Andhra Pradesh has taken the international
seed giant, Monsanto to the Monopoly and Restrictive
Trade Practices (MRTP) Commission for charging license fee of Rs. 1250/
per packet out of an MRP of Rs 1650 to Rs. 1850/- on 450 grams of Bt. cotton
seeds[vi].
The absence of effective price control safeguards indicate that the government
does not want to regulate seed prices and abdicated its responsibility to
ensure adequate seed supply at reasonable price to farmers.
The draft legislation is also
silent on the origin and ownership of the seeds and denies Indian farmers their
due rights over their seeds. Even in the PVPFR Act 2001, there is a provision
to disclose the ownership of the seeds under protection but the draft seeds
legislation does not require disclosure of parentage of seed varieties during
registration, thus facilitating unrestricted commercialization of seeds in the
public domain. It means that the seed companies could use farmers' varieties
without giving any credit to them and farmers may end up paying hundreds of
times the cost of a "registered" seed, which could have been bred
from their own traditional varieties. We had witnessed how Syngenta tried to
steal and monopolize more than 23,000 varieties of paddy seeds collection from
Chattisgarh through signing a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the
Agricultural University in Raipur in Chattisgarh[vii].
Moreover, the Seeds Bill has no provision for helping Indian farmers in
innovating, evolving and commercializing their varieties. On the contrary, the
Bill tries to wipe out the very existence of farmers varieties and their
innovation.
Last but not the least, the
proposed seeds legislation ensures fast track clearance of GM seeds and crops
thus bypassing the well established system of biosafety clearance through the
Genetic Engineering Approval Committee (GEAC), Ministry of Environment and
Forests set up under the GMOs Rules 1989. The Bill advocates for grant of
provisional permission to GM seeds and varieties thus violating the biosafety
norms for monitoring and regulation of GM products under the GMOs Rules of
1989. This also indicates an active involvement of Monsanto’s in pushing this
Bill so that they can bypass GEAC in commercializing their GM seeds.
Based on the above, it is
imperative for us to demand the withdrawal of the Seeds Bill 2004, which does
not have any component to protect Indian farmers from the onslaught of the seed
MNCs, and makes the farmers completely dependent over the seeds companies for
seed supply.
Moreover, instead of legislating
this pro seeds company bill, we should demand the UPA government to strengthen
the Seeds Bill 1966 in order to regulate the national and international seed
companies and protect the interest of farmers and their rights over seeds. An
agriculture dominated country like India requires a Seeds Act which is strong,
transparent and unambiguous in regulating the seed trade and makes the
providers of seed accountable. The speed with which the traditional seeds are already
being replaced with the MNCs seeds, the day is not far when Indian farmers will
be forced to become completely dependent for seed supply from MNCs like
Monsanto who are monopolizing the seed business by mergers and acquisition of
Indian seed companies.
The coming Winter Parliamentary
session will be crucial in deciding the fate of the Indian, “free seeds” or
“controlled seeds”. According to the sources in the Agriculture Committee, all
the anti farmers provisions have been removed but to say anything now would be
premature unless the fresh bill or amended bill, based on the report of the
Committee is tabled in the house. But given the close proximity between
Manmohan Singh’s Government and the Bush Administration, all efforts will be
made to have minimum dilution in the original bill to favour Monsanto and other
big seeds companies.
Monsanto will also ensure that
the original bill, with minor amendments, gets through the Parliament without
much debate and discussion as has happened in the last Parliamentary session,
on 26th July, when the Food Safety and Standards Bill, 2005, inspite
of its far reaching implications for livelihoods of farmers. The Bill that
compromises Indian food culture, food safety and food security, got easily
cleared in the Lok Sabha with bare minimum presence of members in the Lower
House.
Members of Parliament need to be
vigilant to see that the pro-farmers suggestions of the Committee are fully
incorporated in the new proposed legislation. The Indian farmers unions,
activists and concerned citizens need to act as watch and ward to monitor every
development on the seeds bill inside the Parliament and outside.
Monsanto’s objective is to hijack
India’s seed supply and undermine India’s seed sovereignty and this should not
happen. If we lose control over our seed, we lose our freedom. This would be
disastrous for the seed security, food security and freedom of farmers in
India.
Afsar Jafri is a research associate with Focus on the Global South,
based in Mumbai. He can be reached at
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[i] Vidarbha Jan Andolan
Samiti, Nagpur
[ii]
http://agricoop.nic.in/seeds/seeds_bill.htm
[iii] http://www.agricoop.nic.in
[iv] MRTPC asks Monsanto to
charge lower value,
http://www.financialexpress.com/fe_full_story.php?content_id=126765
[v] Bihar bans Monsanto from
selling seeds, http://www.cropchoice.com/leadstry7608.html?recid=1571
[vi] MRTPC asks Monsanto to
charge lower value, http://www.financialexpress.com/fe_full_story.php?content_id=126765
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