TOYAKO, Japan, Jul 9
(IPS) - While the world's major industrialised nations expressed
satisfaction over their three-day summit meetings that concluded
Wednesday, non-governmental organisations, after some early and limited
approval, were deeply disappointed with the outcome on the whole.
"The summit (in Toyako on the northern Japanese island Hokkaido) has
been another betrayal of the poor and citizens of G8 countries," Kumi
Naidoo, co-chair of the Global Call to Action against Poverty (GCAP)
told IPS.
"The outcome shows a lack of understanding of the heart of the issues
causing hunger and desperation in many countries. We hope the citizens
of these eight countries (Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Russia,
Japan, Canada and the United States) will put more pressure on their
out-of-touch leaders," Naidoo said.
"The planet is burning while the G8 is fiddling," the GCAP co-chair
added.
Naidoo said the GCAP representatives of ten countries observing the G8
were deeply concerned at how out of touch with reality the G8 seemed to
be on the main issues related to ending poverty.
GCAP is a growing alliance of trade unions, community groups, faith
groups, women and youth organisations, NGOs and other campaigners
working together across more than 100 countries. GCAP is calling for
action from the world's leaders to meet their promises to end poverty
and inequality.
"The lack of any real discussion on biofuels in relation to the food
price crisis is appalling. References to health, education and water
are, sadly, not supported by adequate resources and a timeline
commitment," said Naidoo.
While the G8 pays "lip service to the MDGs", their commitments suggest
that even these minimalist goals are seriously at risk of failing by
2015, Naidoo said.
MDGs are the eight Millennium Development Goals that range from halving
extreme poverty to halting the spread of HIV/AIDS and providing
universal primary education, to be met by the target date of 2015.
These were agreed by heads of state and government at a special session
of the UN General Assembly in September 2000.
The G8 said in a document on Development and Africa that "although
progress has been made, significant challenges remain. We renew our
commitment to these goals by reinvigorating our efforts, and by
strengthening our partnerships with, as well as encouraging the efforts
of, the developing countries based on mutual accountability."
Minar Pimple, Asia director of the UN Millennium Campaign commented:
"Reaffirmation of MDG commitment is a positive signal in the run-up to
the MDG high level event in September, but the financial resources on
the table fall short of what needs to be achieved by 2015."
GCAP said that the G8 communiqué this year only reiterates most
of the group's earlier commitments "but the world has changed for the
worse since 2005."
The increase in food prices by 30 to 45 percent has had a devastating
effect, especially on women and children trying to survive on less than
a dollar a day, GCAP warns. Millions more are being pushed into
poverty, it says.
"Japan was not able to muster up the leadership we hoped to see from
them as summit host," GCAP Japan representative Tatsuo Hayashi said.
"The Japanese people wanted more action to end poverty, so they will be
disappointed too."
These remarks stand in stark contrast to the kudos Japanese Prime
Minister Yasuo Fukuda received this week from summit participants for
his "leadership, commitment and sense of purpose," as one participant
described it.
In another analysis of the conference documents, GCAP welcomed the 10
billion dollars pledged by the G8 since January 2008 towards the global
food price crisis, but said "it is still a knee-jerk response that
doesn't address the long-term structural causes.
"The G8 promotion of the 'development of open and efficient
agricultural and food markets' has denied poor people the chance to
feed themselves today. It treats food as a mere commodity," said Joseph
Ssuuna of the PELUM Association in Uganda, which is a member of GCAP.
"The G8 also seem to be pressing for quick-fix trade negotiations which
we believe would be devastating -- no deal is better than a bad deal,"
said Charles Abani of GCAP Africa.
"Tragically, market-driven development, one of the principal causes of
the present food crisis, appears to be the solution offered by the
present G8 leaders. This is appalling," said Dian Kartika of GCAP
Indonesia.
Reacting to the G8 leaders' statement on the Global Food Security
Tuesday, farmer leader from the 'Via Campesina' group Yoshitaka Mashima
said: "We do not understand why the G8 leaders pretend to solve the
food crisis with more free trade while it is the liberalisation of
agriculture and food markets that continue to lead us to the current
crisis.
"People need to eat local food to protect themselves from the
instability of world markets. We do not need more imported food,"
Mashima told IPS.
At a press conference Wednesday, farmers' leaders said that the G8
governments were mistakenly using the current food and climate crisis
to promote the free trade agenda that is serving large companies, and
not producers of food or the consumers.
The G8 leaders' statement insists on reviving the agonising WTO
negotiations and on preventing countries from regulating food exports.
"Small farmers around the world, men and women, have experienced the
devastating effects of free trade and WTO policies on livelihoods and
local food production," the farmers' statement said. "They defend the
right of countries to protect their domestic markets, to support
sustainable family farmers, and to market food in the countries where
it is produced."
It said that the G8 leaders also fail to address two major causes of
the current food price crisis: speculation by major traders and
transnational companies, and the development of bio-fuel as a new
source of energy.
"It is important to keep in mind that these root causes of the food
crisis are the consequences of the neo-liberal policies promoted by the
G8 governments, the WTO, the World Bank and other institutions,"
Mashima said.
The farmers point out that the G8 also explicitly promotes genetically
modified organisms (GMO) as a solution to the food crisis. In doing so,
they say, the G8 countries forget that the development of industrial
agriculture, with the use of GMO seeds, large amounts of chemical
pesticides, fertilisers and monoculture has left millions of farmers in
debt.
The statement also challenges the G8 claim about "fostering small
holder agriculture." But Mashima said: "We are wondering how the
world's richest nations will support small farmers if they do not even
allow them to enter the countries where they are meeting."
Nineteen Korean farmers from Via Campesina were deported from Hokkaido
airport Jul. 5 after being detained for 48 hours on the grounds that
they could disturb the official meetings.
Mashima said that peasants and small food producers currently produce
the bulk of world food, and no solution to the current crisis will be
found without listening to them.
http://www.countercurrents.org/jaura100708.htm
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