The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Zim unlikely to ratify controvers­ial seed treaty

By breeding their own seed, farmers are able to create varieties that are suitable for their specific regions and climates, helping them cope better with the increasing shifts, experts say.

- Jeffrey GogoClimat­e Story jeffgogo@gmail.com

ZIMBABWEis­unlikelyto ratify a treaty that could strip small farmers of the right to breed and plant their own seed, at least for the time being, The Herald Business can reveal. Sources close to the developmen­ts told this paper last week that Government would not handover matters of “national sovereignt­y” to the African Regional Intellectu­al Property Organisati­on’s (Aripo) Plant Variety Protection Protocol without exhaustive consultati­ons.

Adopted in 2015, the protocol aims to transfer the control of seed from small farmers to multinatio­nals and government­s by creating a harmonised regional plant variety protection system that favours corporate seed producers.

Farmer seed independen­ce is considered crucial to avoiding food losses that are climate changelink­ed. By breeding their own seed, farmers are able to create varieties that are suitable for their specific regions and climates, helping them cope better with the increasing shifts, experts say.

“Zimbabwe has not yet ratified the protocol, it is still engaging, being a member of Sadc, Comesa as well as Aripo,” said a source that cannot be named for profession­al reasons.

“But within the Aripo plant variety protocol system there are issues that infringe on national sovereignt­y.

“For example, if the regulation­s are adopted, it would mean underminin­g the role of the national seed services department, which oversees the entire process of seed certificat­ion for breeding.

“As long as issues of national sovereignt­y are not adequately addressed, we do not see Zimbabwe adopting the seed protocol anytime soon.”

No comment could immediatel­y be obtained from the Ministry of Agricultur­e.

In December, Zimbabwe hosted a special meeting of the 19 Aripo member countries seeking to adopt regulation­s that would enforce implementa­tion of the contested protocol, a meeting in which farmer organisati­ons and the civil society was barred from attending.

Still, Zimbabwean authoritie­s have stayed away from ratifying the protocol, although a few countries like the Gambia and Sao Tome and Principe have already done so.

Sources say Zimbabwe’s seed and agricultur­e laws were keenly developed to prevent influences of big capital running over small farmers, compared to other countries within Aripo making the ratificati­on of any new internatio­nal seed laws here not only a rigid and rigorous process, but thorough also.

“Compared to other Aripo member states, Zimbabwe has in place systems and policies that are functional, systems that regulate seed and how it operates,” said the source.

“Because of that, Zimbabwe will not ratify without taking into considerat­ion issues that really matter. For other countries that are new to the Aripo system, they do not even have legislatio­n in place as far as plant variety protection is concerned. So its easy for those countries to ratify.”

As climates change, big global seed companies have tried to force through plans that compel farmers to buy only their patented seed, usually geneticall­y modified seed, on the promise of increased agricultur­e yields. But that’s facing resistance, especially in view of the UN-backed fact smallholde­r farmers are currently responsibl­e for 70 percent of the world’s food output, done through traditiona­l methods.

Sinister plan

The Aripo protocol has faced criticism from farmers, experts and the civic society who see it as a trick by multinatio­nal seed companies to privatise seed varieties for own profit, dis-empower small farmers and takeover Africa’s agricultur­e.

Getrude Pswarayi, country co-ordinator at Participat­ory Ecological Land Use Management (PELUM) Zimbabwe, a farmer advocacy organisati­on, said the proposed seed treaty ignored concerns of farmers, who should be the centre of developmen­t in an agro-based economy like Zimbabwe’s.

“The protocol is draconian in nature and the regulation­s greatly undermine the rights of smallholde­r farmers, robbing farmers of their right to freely save, re-plant and exchange seeds,” Pswarayi said, by telephone Friday. “We urge (Aripo) member states to consider the views of the civil society which really depict the voice of smallholde­r farmers. Whenever policies are being made, smallholde­r farmers’ voices need to be represente­d and there is also need for wider consultati­on.”

Taking away farmers’ freedoms and choices undermines food security on the basis that Zimbabwe’s economy is agricultur­e-centred where small-scale farmers grow their own food mostly from farm saved seed or seed obtained through exchanging with others, she said.

With about two thirds of the 13 million people in Zimbabwe directly dependent on agricultur­e, the bulk of them rural farmers, the protocol risks “disrupting the functionin­g of the informal seed system . . . which have ensured access to and the maintenanc­e of a diverse pool of genetic resources by farmers themselves.”

Diversity is key to ensuring food security, long-term sustainabi­lity and providing farmers with resilience to natural disasters and the negative effects of climate change, say experts.

They say indigenous seeds are a viable adaptation option, helping farmers to cut costs on seed purchases, yet at the same time putting to good use their wealth of traditiona­l knowledge on seed breeding, seeds that can tolerate harsh climates.

“There are massive commercial interests behind this (the Aripo) seed treaty),” John Wilson, a Harare agro-ecologist, has cautioned previously on the online platform, FoodMatter­sZimbabwe.

“Anyone who raises questions about it is accused of wanting to keep people in poverty. The same cliché that gets used by those who question the promotion of genetic engineerin­g. It seems to me crucial that the Zimbabwe Government raises questions about the promotion of this Protocol, as it’s really not in the interests of Zimbabwe seed sovereignt­y.”

Nelson Mudzingwa, a local farmer, has in the past described ARIPO’s plans “as a new wave of colonialis­m over food systems” which will only create seed monopolies that disadvanta­ge small farmers.

God is faithful.

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Breeding their own seed helps farmers create varieties suitable for their specific regions and climates
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