| October 17, 2004 -- CropChoice
news -- GRAIN, Oct. 2004: When former Coalition Provisional
Authority (CPA) administrator L. Paul Bremer III left Baghdad after
the so-called "transfer of sovereignty" in June 2004,
he left behind the 100 orders he enacted as chief of the occupation
authority in Iraq. Among them is Order 81 on "Patent, Industrial
Design, Undisclosed Information, Integrated Circuits and Plant Variety."[1]
This order amends Iraq's original patent law of 1970 and unless
it is revised or repealed by a new Iraqi government, it has the
status and force of a binding law.[2]
With important implications for farmers and the future of agriculture
in Iraq, this order is yet another important component in the United
States' attempts to radically transform Iraq's economy.
Who gains?
For generations, small farmers in Iraq operated in an essentially
unregulated, informal seed supply system. Farm-saved seed and the
free innovation with and exchange of planting materials among farming
communities has long been the basis of agricultural practice. This
has been made illegal under the new law. The seeds farmers are now
allowed to plant -- "protected" crop varieties brought
into Iraq by transnational corporations in the name of agricultural
reconstruction -- will be the property of the corporations. While
historically the Iraqi constitution prohibited private ownership
of biological resources, the new US-imposed patent law introduces
a system of monopoly rights over seeds.
Inserted into Iraq's previous patent law is a whole new chapter
on Plant Variety Protection (PVP) that provides for the "protection
of new varieties of plants." PVP is an intellectual property
right (IPR) or a kind of patent for plant varieties which gives
an exclusive monopoly right on planting material to a plant breeder
who claims to have discovered or developed a new variety. So the
"protection" in PVP has nothing to do with conservation,
but refers to safeguarding of the commercial interests of private
breeders (usually large corporations) claiming to have created the
new plants.
To qualify for PVP, plant varieties must comply with the standards
of the UPOV[3] Convention, which requires them be new, distinct,
uniform and stable. Farmers' seeds cannot meet these criteria, making
PVP-protected seeds the exclusive domain of corporations. The rights
granted to plant breeders in this scheme include the exclusive right
to produce, reproduce, sell, export, import and store the protected
varieties. These rights extend to harvested material, including
whole plants and parts of plants obtained from the use of a protected
variety. This kind of PVP system is often the first step towards
allowing the full-fledged patenting of life forms. Indeed, in this
case the rest of the law does not rule out the patenting of plants
or animals.
The term of the monopoly is 20 years for crop varieties and 25
for trees and vines. During this time the protected variety de facto
becomes the property of the breeder, and nobody can plant or otherwise
use this variety without compensating the breeder. This new law
means that Iraqi farmers can neither freely legally plant nor save
for re-planting seeds of any plant variety registered under the
plant variety provisions of the new patent law.[4] This deprives
farmers what they and many others worldwide claim as their inherent
right to save and replant seeds.
Corporate control
The new law is presented as being necessary to ensure the supply
of good quality seeds in Iraq and to facilitate Iraq's accession
to the WTO[5]. What it will actually do is facilitate the penetration
of Iraqi agriculture by the likes of Monsanto, Syngenta, Bayer and
Dow Chemical -- the corporate giants that control seed trade across
the globe. Eliminating competition from farmers is a prerequisite
for these companies to open up operations in Iraq, which the new
law has achieved. Taking over the first step in the food chain is
their next move.
The new patent law also explicitly promotes the commercialization
of genetically modified (GM) seeds in Iraq. Despite serious resistance
from farmers and consumers around the world, these same companies
are pushing GM crops on farmers around the world for their own profit.
Contrary to what the industry is asserting, GM seeds do not reduce
the use of pesticides, but they pose a threat to the environment
and to people's health while they increase farmers dependency on
agribusiness. In some countries like India, the 'accidental' release
of GM crops is deliberately manipulated[6], since physical segregation
of GM and GM-free crops is not feasible. Once introduced into the
agro-ecological cycle there is no possible recall or cleanup from
genetic pollution[7].
As to the WTO argument, Iraq legally has a number of options for
complying with the organization's rules on intellectual property
but the US simply decided that Iraq should not enjoy or explore
them.
Reconstruction facade
Iraq is one more arena in a global drive for the adoption of seed
patent laws protecting the monopoly rights of multinational corporations
at the expense of local farmers. Over the past decade, many countries
of the South have been compelled8 to adopt seed patent laws through
bilateral treaties[9]. The US has pushed for UPOV-styled plant protection
laws beyond the IPR standards of the WTO in bilateral trade through
agreements for example with Sri Lanka[10] and Cambodia[11]. Likewise,
post-conflict countries have been especially targeted. For instance,
as part of its reconstruction package the US has recently signed
a Trade and Investment Framework Agreement with Afghanistan[12],
which would also include IPR-related issues.
Iraq is a special case in that the adoption of the patent law was
not part of negotiations between sovereign countries. Nor did a
sovereign law-making body enact it as reflecting the will of the
Iraqi people. In Iraq, the patent law is just one more component
in the comprehensive and radical transformation of the occupied
country's economy along neo-liberal lines by the occupying powers.
This transformation would entail not just the adoption of favored
laws but also the establishment of institutions that are most conducive
to a free market regime.
Order 81 is just one of 100 Orders left behind by Bremer and among
the more notable of these laws is the controversial Order 39 which
effectively lays down the over-all legal framework for Iraq's economy
by giving foreign investors rights equal to Iraqis in exploiting
Iraq's domestic market. Taken together, all these laws, which cover
virtually all aspects of the economy -- including Iraq's trade regime,
the mandate of the Central Bank, regulations on trade union activities,
etc. -- lay the bases for the United States bigger objective of
building a neo-liberal regime in Iraq. Order 81 explicitly states
that its provisions are consistent with Iraq's "transition
from a non-transparent centrally planned economy to a free market
economy characterized by sustainable economic growth through the
establishment of a dynamic private sector, and the need to enact
institutional and legal reforms to give it effect."
Pushing for these "reforms" in Iraq has been the US Agency
for International Development, which has been implementing an Agricultural
Reconstruction and Development Program for Iraq (ARDI) since October
2003. To carry it out, a one-year US$5 million contract was granted
to the US consulting firm Development Alternatives, Inc.[13] with
the Texas A&M University[14] as an implementing partner. Part
of the work has been sub-contracted to Sagric International[15]
of Australia. The goal of ARDI in the name of rebuilding the farming
sector is to develop the agribusiness opportunities and thus provide
markets for agricultural products and services from overseas.
Reconstruction work, thus, is not necessarily about rebuilding
domestic economies and capacities, but about helping corporations
approved by the occupying forces to capitalize on market opportunities
in Iraq.[16] The legal framework laid down by Bremer ensures that
although US troops may leave Iraq in the conceivable future, US
domination of Iraq's economy is here to stay.
Food sovereignty
Food sovereignty is the right of people to define their own food
and agriculture policies, to protect and regulate domestic agricultural
production and trade, to decide the way food should be produced,
what should be grown locally and what should be imported. The demand
for food sovereignty and the opposition to the patenting of seeds
has been central to the small farmers' struggle all over the world
over the past decade. By fundamentally altering the IPR regime,
the US has ensured that Iraq's agricultural system will remain under
"occupation" in Iraq.
Iraq has the potential to feed itself. But instead of developing
this capacity, the US has shaped the future of Iraq's food and farming
to serve the interests of US corporations. The new IPR regime pays
scant respect to Iraqi farmers' contributions to the development
of important crops like wheat, barley, date and pulses. Samples
of such farmers' varieties were starting to be saved in the 1970s
in the country's national gene bank in Abu Ghraib outside Baghdad.
It is feared that all these have been lost in the long years of
conflict. However, the Syria-based Consultative Group on International
Agricultural Research (CGIAR)[17] center -- International Center
for Agricultural Research in Dry Areas (ICARDA) still holds accessions
of several Iraqi varieties. These collections that are evidence
of the Iraqi farmers' knowledge are supposed to be held in trust
by the center. These comprise the agricultural heritage of Iraq
belonging to the Iraqi farmers that ought now to be repatriated.
There have been situations where germplasm held by an international
agricultural research center has been "leaked out" for
research and development to Northern scientists[18]. Such kind of
"biopiracy" is fueled by an IPR regime that ignores the
prior art of the farmer and grants rights to a breeder who claims
to have created something new from the material and knowledge of
the very farmer.
While political sovereignty remains an illusion, food sovereignty
for the Iraqi people has already been made near impossible by these
new regulations. Iraq's freedom and sovereignty will remain questionable
for as long as Iraqis do not have control over what they sow, grow,
reap and eat.
Source: URL: http://www.grain.org/articles/?id=6
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