The Guardian (USA)

PepsiCo offers to settle with Indian potato farmers after backlash

- Benjamin Parkin in Delhi

PepsiCo has faced a backlash after suing four Indian farmers who allegedly grew a patented strain of potatoes used in its Lay’s crisps without the company’s permission.

The company, which originally soughtabou­t $150,000 (£116,000) in damages from each of the farmers, arguing they broke the law by sourcing and dealing the potatoes, offered to settle “amicably” when the case went to court in the western Indian city of Ahmedabad on Friday.

The case sparked outrage from farmers and others concerned that PepsiCo was using its clout to interfere with the country’s food supply. The role of foreign companies in producing and selling food in India is a hotly contested issue, particular­ly when concerning geneticall­y modified (GM) crops.

“It’s a question of India’s seed sovereignt­y, food sovereignt­y and country sovereignt­y,” said Kapil Shah, an activist who is defending the farmers. “It’s spreading panic among the farmers.”

A number of farmers’ groups in India have banded together to protest against the court action. Ambubhai Patel, the vice-president of a farmers’ associatio­n, Bharatiya Kisan Sangh, said they were lobbying the government to back the accused farmers’ favour and punish the “harassment” of other farmers.

Patel’s group is linked to the prime minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata party (BJP), which has increased its scrutiny of foreign companies in the run-up to national elections ending in late May.

“Potato-growing farmers have nothing to worry [about] and we can’t allow such intimidati­on,” Patel told local media. “We will fight against it in court as well as on the streets if needed.”

PepsiCo said the farmers who grew its strain of potatoes without permission were hurting the interests of the many people working with the company to produce them for its Lay’s crisps. It supplies those farmers with seeds and subsequent­ly buys back the potatoes.

“PepsiCo is India’s largest processgra­de potato buyer and amongst the first companies to work with thousands of local farmers to grow a specific protected variety of potatoes for it,” a spokespers­on said in a statement.

The spokespers­on later added that the company was compelled to take legal action as a “last resort”, and was “deeply committed to resolving the matter”.

Companies such as PepsiCo have previously faced criticism for their use of natural resources, facing a boycott in one drought-hit Indian state in 2017 for allegedly using excessive amounts of water to manufactur­e soft drinks.

Memories of the shortage were high on the minds of some commentato­rs this week. “Let us hope PepsiCo won’t sue people for using the same groundwate­r used in Pepsi,” Ravi Nair, a journalist, wrote on Twitter.

 ??  ?? PepsiCo’s Lay’s crisps. The role of foreign companies in producing and selling food in India is a hotly contested issue. Photograph: Tim Gainey/Alamy
PepsiCo’s Lay’s crisps. The role of foreign companies in producing and selling food in India is a hotly contested issue. Photograph: Tim Gainey/Alamy

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