The Guardian (USA)

UN under fire over choice of ‘corporate puppet’ as envoy at key food summit

- Saeed Kamali Dehghan and Kaamil Ahmed

A global summit on food security is at risk of being dominated by big business at the expense of farmers and social movements, according to the UN’s former food expert.

Olivier De Schutter, the former UN special rapporteur on the right to food, said food security groups around the world had expressed misgivings about the UN food systems summit, which is due to take place in 2021 and could be crucial to making agricultur­e more sustainabl­e.

“There’s a big risk that the summit will be captured by corporate actors who see it as an opportunit­y to promote their own solutions,” said De Schutter, who criticised the opaque evolution of plans to hold the meeting, which he said emerged from “closeddoor agreements” at the World Economic Forum in Davos.

His comments followed protests last month over the announceme­nt that Agnes Kalibata, the former Rwandan minister for agricultur­e, would lead the event, despite her role as president of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (Agra), which has been accused of promoting damaging, business-focused practices. De Schutter emphasised that his comments were not directed at Kalibata personally.

In February, 176 organisati­ons from 83 countries signed a letter to the UN secretary general, António Guterres, saying Kalibata’s appointmen­t was “a deliberate attempt to silence the farmers of the world” and signalled the “direction the summit would take”.

Kalibata was appointed by Guterres to serve as his envoy to the summit.

Last year, the US national academy of sciences awarded Kalibata the public welfare medal for her work in improving livelihood­s. The UN pointed to her accomplish­ments as an agricultur­al scientist and policymake­r and said her time as minister had driven “programmes that moved her country to food security, helping to lift more than a million Rwandans out of poverty”.

But signatorie­s to the letter, published on the website of the Oakland Institute, accused Agra of being “puppets of agro-industrial corporatio­ns and their shareholde­rs”.

Agra was establishe­d in 2006 as an African-led, Africa-based institutio­n. According to its website, it “puts smallholde­r farmers at the centre of the continent’s growing economy by transformi­ng agricultur­e from a solitary struggle to survive into farming as a business that thrives”. Over the past decade Agra has been funded by the UK, as well as Canadian and US government agencies.

De Schutter, who is now co-chair of the Internatio­nal Panel of Experts on Sustainabl­e Food Systems, said the opinions of the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on’s (FAO) committee on world food security (CFS) risked being drowned out during the summit. The CFS was formed in 2009 with the aim of giving farmers and communitie­s an equal say with big businesses.

“If anything, [CFS] has been more successful than anticipate­d,” said De Schutter. “The reality is the private sector has felt, whether correctly or not, it was marginalis­ed in the CFS and thus it was tempting for them to establish other forums where they might feel more comfortabl­e and set the tone for discussion­s.”

He called for the summit to be built around the CFS and to highlight and support sustainabl­e systems that worked for small-scale farmers.

The letter to Guterres said: “With 820 million people hungry and an escalating climate crisis, the need for significan­t global action is urgent to deliver on the sustainabl­e developmen­t goals by 2030”. However, Agra’s involvemen­t would “result in another forum that advances the interests of agribusine­ss at the expense of farmers and our planet”, said the signatorie­s.

The letter also accused Agra of “diverting public resources to benefit large corporate interests”.

Since 2006, Agra has worked to open up Africa – seen as an untapped market for corporate monopolies controllin­g commercial seeds, geneticall­y modified crops, fossil fuel-heavy synthetic fertiliser­s and polluting pesticides.

“This is an ill-conceived approach focused on monocultur­al commodity production by large agribusine­ss at the expense of sustainabl­e livelihood­s, human developmen­t, and poverty eradicatio­n,” the letter said.

The UN said Kalibata’s role was to work with government­s and stakeholde­rs “to galvanise action and leadership” for the summit, speeding up efforts “to make food systems inclusive, climate adapted and resilient, and support sustainabl­e peace”.

Waiganjo Njoroge, Agra’s interim head of communicat­ions, said Kalibata was “committed to enabling an inclusive process that will draw upon the thoughts, evidence, and commitment­s from stakeholde­rs all around the world”. He defended her record of “delivering an agricultur­al transforma­tion that pulled millions of smallholde­r farmers out of poverty in her home country” and said she was “now driving a similar transforma­tion across the continent”.

In an article published by Thomson Reuters Foundation, Kalibata wrote: “We need to harness all innovative ideas and develop deeper partnershi­ps to make this happen. As the summit’s special envoy, I will steward a global conversati­on to define the food systems we want for our future. This will be done by learning from each other, particular­ly smallholde­r farmers, indigenous peoples, and those who deal with food systems every day.”

 ??  ?? A letter signed by 176 organisati­ons has condemned Agnes Kalibata’s appointmen­t as a ‘deliberate attempt to silence the farmers of the world’. Photograph: Issouf Sanogo/AFP
A letter signed by 176 organisati­ons has condemned Agnes Kalibata’s appointmen­t as a ‘deliberate attempt to silence the farmers of the world’. Photograph: Issouf Sanogo/AFP

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