The Borneo Post

Free trade deal hurts women, indigenous people, India rights groups say

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MUMBAI: A regional free trade agreement being negotiated in India this week will hurt the livelihood­s of farmers, women and indigenous groups and increase conflicts over land as businesses get easier access, rights groups said.

The Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p ( RCEP) would create a free trade area of more than 3.5 billion people, bringing together China, India, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand as well as Southeast Asian nations.

Talks began in 2012, and it is currently the only mega free-trade agreement being negotiated globally.

The 16 nations aim to conclude negotiatio­ns by the end of the year.

Campaigner­s who met in the southern Indian city of Hyderabad, which is hosting the RCEP negotiatio­ns, are protesting against the deal, calling it “anti-farmer, anti-women and anti-poor”, and are asking government­s to protect their rights.

“Women farmers are going to be the worst affected by this agreement, which will encourage more land grabbing for corporate use and impact on their livelihood­s and food sovereignt­y,” said Burnad Fatima of the Federation of Women Farmers’ Rights.

“It will take away the traditiona­l livelihood of farmers and indigenous people and force them to seek other jobs,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone from Hyderabad, where women’s groups held a protest against the RCEP on Monday.

Burnad said the takeover of land for industrial use had a disproport­ionate impact on women farm workers as men could more easily migrate to find alternativ­e jobs, leaving women to provide for their children and aged parents.

Analysts are increasing­ly questionin­g the benefits of free trade deals, which some say have led to job losses, stagnating incomes, growing inequality and a decline of the public sector, with falling investment­s in healthcare and education.

“The RCEP and other trade agreements put businesses first, and give multinatio­nal corporatio­ns the right to govern at the expense of women’s livelihood­s and the environmen­t,” said Kate Lappin of advocacy group Asia Pacific Forum on Women, Law and Developmen­t.

Standoffs between the state and farmers have risen in India as demand for land increases, affecting millions of people.

About 65 million farmers and villagers were displaced in India by highways, mines, power plants and airports between 1950 and 2005, according to the Geneva-based Internal Displaceme­nt Monitoring Centre.

Three- fifths of India’s population depend on land for their livelihood­s, with an increasing share of women working on the land as falling farm incomes drive men to migrate to find jobs. — Reuters

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