Agrarian reform and rights of peasants, farm workers and fisherfolk
The storm is coming.
Today, despite widespread protests,
the US-led Trans Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP) will be signed
by the 12 member countries in New Zealand. The mega-regional “free
trade agreement” (FTA) negotiations had been kept in the shadows
for almost a decade and had the text only made public last October
2015 while the annexes remain a secret. The massive 30-chapter deal
contains provisions that would intensify global landgrabbing,
dislocate the capacity for food sovereignty and impede rural and
national development among underdeveloped and dependent states.
Dubbed as “WTO1 on steroids”, the
lucrative deal covers stricter rules and provisions on intensified
trade liberalization, investment protection, international dispute
settlement and management of government assets among others. When
enforced, the TPP would be the largest FTA yet, covering 40% of the
world’s economy and setting a precedent for 21st century FTAs.
Combined with escalating rotational military presence and
reinforcing military alliances in the Pacific region, TPP plays a
key role in the US pivot to Asia – encircling China and protecting
the US’ geopolitical interests.
The TPP’s implications on
agriculture and the rural sectors are beyond far reaching. Global
landgrabbing would spiral as the TPP fortifies the power of
transnational corporations to own and control lands, as a
presupposition in signing. Lands will be legally sullied, displacing
thousands of farmers, for agro-fuels and cash-crop plantations.
Also, as the TPP imposes the pre-crisis model of extreme financial
deregulation to signatory countries, landgrabbing for
financialization will also heighten. Huge corporations will have a
spree at this as all trade barriers, tariff and non-tariff, will go,
and as all restrictions in investments imposed by national
governments will be frozen and rolled back.
Chronic hunger will be pervasive in
TPP as it directly undermines the right and capacity to food
sovereignty of underdeveloped and dependent states. Imperialism has
always put the monopolization of agriculture and food in priority,
even before the WTO. Numerous safeguards are in place in TPP for
transnational agrochemical companies such as Monsanto, Dupont,
Syngenta, Cargill, etc. Stricter impositions on intellectual
property rights (IPR) of seeds are in TPP. In effect, use of
traditional seeds will be criminalized under the protection of
patented seeds. Also, seeds imported from monopolies will be much
costlier as the seed diversity in countries drop – a guarantee of
exponential increase in profit.
To add, TPP will undermine the right
of the signatory country to reject genetically modified organisms
(GMOs) that they have not approved and to subject those GMOs to a
prior risk assessment. This implies uninterrupted GMO trade to the
benefit of producers of GMOs such as US and Canada.
Meanwhile, the local market will be
flooded with heavily subsidized cheap agricultural imports from
developed countries such as US and EU as trade barriers are taken
down. These would under-price the local agricultural exports and
dominate the local market, dislodging local farmers and producers as
the country becomes more and more import reliant.
Another key feature of TPP is its
impositions to hinder rural development and national
industrialization of underdeveloped and dependent states. The TPP
advocates the malevolent investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS)
model of the OECD2 where investors can sue governments while
virtually restricting the reverse. TPP maintains that signatory
countries must uphold and protect investor rights against public
interest. ISDS provides that transnational companies can sue
governments if they are “unduly favouring” the local agriculture
to the detriment of transnational profits. Also, asserting public
interest such as termination of contracts, market-denial, or new
legislations for environmental, political, or developmental reasons
counter to corporate power will be held against the signatory
country. Moreover, TPP locks in privatization of state assets
including government-owned and controlled corporations. This
denationalization of industries and de-industrialization will only
benefit the imperialist countries and will ultimately impede rural
and national development, if not roll back.
More than a trade deal between the US
and 11 Pacific Rim countries, TPP is a scheme to surge US
imperialism’s hegemony in the Asia-Pacific region by trampling on
and circumventing national economic borders. It bolsters corporate
domination by locking in US-partisan safeguards for the further
concentration of wealth to the world’s richest 1%, to the
detriment of farmers, rural peoples and dependent and underdeveloped
nations. TPP represents the renewed offensive of globalization –
the unprecedented heightening of the exploitation of the working
class and peoples of the world.
We therefore call upon all our member
organizations, networks, farmers, fisherfolk, rural women,
agricultural workers, and rural peoples of the world to fight TPP.
Let us demand our governments not to sign this one-sided and
anti-people deal. Let us brave the storm and fight the TPP and FTAs
as imperialist tools of hegemony.
Fight the Trans-Pacific Partnership
Agreement!
Fight the US pivot to Asia!
Defeat imperialism!
Fight the US pivot to Asia!
Defeat imperialism!
No comments:
Post a Comment