Rio de Janeiro, Brazil -- The People's
Coalition on Food Sovereignty (PCFS), with its 15-strong
delegation composed mainly of small-scale peasants and
indigenous peoples bat for the advancement of the principles of
Food Sovereignty in the UN Conference on Sustainable Development
or the 2012 Earth Summit.
PCFS brings to the Rio+20 Summit and the
parallel People's Summit the results of its Africa-wide CSO
consultation held in Nairobi last May 30-31, 2012. The activity
was participated by CSO representatives from more than 15
countries and issued a declaration calling for a sustainable
development agenda centered on human rights and not with the
corporatized green economy (GE) model which is one of the main
themes of the ongoing Rio+20 negotiations.
Specific to concerns on food sovereignty, the
network stressed that sustainable agriculture development cannot
be achieved if global and national policies continue to focus on
the current industrial agricultural practices which causes
pollution, land grabbing, poor working conditions, food
insecurity and poverty.
Thus, the group recommends a major shift
under a food sovereignty framework towards adequate, safe,
nutritious food for all, including policies and investments to
support small-scale farmers, women producers, workers and secure
access to (and protection of) the water, land, soils,
biodiversity, and other resources upon which our food security
depends. It also added that agrarian reform must be carried out
in order to secure worker’s, farmer’s and rural people’s
democratic access to land, water resources and seeds, as well as
to finance infrastructure. They also demanded that food
production and trade policies must prioritize domestic food
self-sufficiency and the livelihoods of small farmers, fishers,
workers, women and indigenous people.
PCFS is also a part of the Right for
Sustainability (R4S) initiative being coordinated by IBON
International. The R4S network has recently drafted five key
asks which they believe are a minimum basis for any meaningful
outcome at Rio+20. The said minimum demands are: a) Reaffirm and
build upon Rights and Rio principles in Rio+20; b) Ensure
democratic access and control of smallholders, women, indigenous
peoples, youth and other marginalized groups over resources such
as land, water, seeds, forests, finance, appropriate
technologies and infrastructure; c) Commit adequate public
financing for poverty eradication, social equity and sustainable
development; d) Establish a strong regulatory framework for the
private sector to ensure that it contributes to rather than
undermines sustainable development; and, e)Establish
participatory accountability mechanisms through which the
people’s voice, including that of women and youth, can be
reflected and independent monitoring of Rio commitments can be
conducted at the national, regional and global levels.
The group pledges to popularize the said
minimum demands and pressure the negotiating process to raise
them in the deliberations. Some of the delegates from PCFS are
its Co-chairs Antonio Tujan Jr. of IBON International and Azra
Sayeed of Pakistan-based civil society organization Roots for
Equity. Celestine Akpobari of the Nigeria-based Ogoni Solidarity
Forum, Diery Gaye of Conseil National de Concertation et de
Coopération des Ruraux (CNCR), Professor Oyugi of the Social
Development Network of Kenya among other representatives of CSOs
from Asia and Africa are also participating in the Cupula Dos
Povos or the People's Summit that coincides with the Rio+
Summit.
PCFS is a growing network of various
grassroots groups of small food producers particularly of
peasant-farmer organizations, consumer movements and their
support NGOs, working towards a People's Convention on Food
Sovereignty.###
PCFS Secretariat
AFRICA: Kirichwa Road, Wanandege flats, Apartment no.
D4, Kilimani P. O. Box 36851 - 00200 Nairobi, Kenya. Office
Tel: +254 20 234 5762, 0704 353 043
mobile:+254 706232589
ASIA: 3/F IBON Center, 114 Timog Avenue, Quezon City
1103, Philippines
Phone: +632
9277060 to 62
loc 203 Fax: +632 9276981
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