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[ecofem] AP: Small Canadian Farmer Fights Monsanto

Will Affleck-Asch
Mon, 19 Jan 2004 21:42:43 -0800

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=517&e=5&u=/ap/anti_biotech_farmer

World - AP Canada


Small Canadian Farmer Fights Monsanto

Mon Jan 19, 5:07 PM ET


By PAUL ELIAS, AP Biotechnology Writer

OTTAWA - The case of a small-time farmer from the remote Saskatchewan plains, now 
before 
Canada's highest court, may represent the best chance yet for foes of the global 
biotech 
revolution to get the law on their side.
 
Agribusiness giant Monsanto Co. sued the farmer, Percy Schmeiser, after its agents 
found biotech 
canola growing in his fields in 1997. It contends he replanted seeds from those plants 
without 
paying a technology fee of about $12 an acre. 

But Schmeiser says the Monsanto canola, originating from neighbors' fields, got onto 
his 1,400 
acres without his involvement or knowledge. The 73-year-old farmer says the 
contamination of his 
crops destroyed a lifetime of work improving them, so it's hardly right that he would 
have to 
pay for Monsanto's seed. 

The biotech seed could have migrated to Schmeiser's land as airborne pollen, carried 
by animals 
or spilled from a cart, he speculates. 

But Monsanto, which has a lien on Schmeiser's farm after two lower- court victories, 
says there 
was simply too much biotech canola in his fields for the accidental exposure 
explanation to be 
credible. 

It insists Schmeiser must pay every year for seed, just like 30,000 other canola 
farmers in 
Canada, where roughly half the 10 million acres of canola have been converted since 
1996 to 
Monsanto's variety, which is engineered to survive the company's patented weed killer 
Roundup. 

"The bottom line for us is that his possession and growing was not an accident," 
Monsanto 
spokeswoman Trish Jordan said. 

Schmeiser may find more sympathy during his hearing Tuesday before Canada's Supreme 
Court, which 
a little more than a year ago refused to grant Harvard University a "patent on life" 
for a 
genetically engineered mouse. 

His supporters also include the government of Ontario, which argues that public health 
suffers 
when life forms are patented. The province is ignoring patents held by Myriad Genetics 
of Salt 
Lake City on two genes implicated in breast cancer, administering its own cancer tests 
at a 
third of Myriad's list price. 

The Canadian justices will hold three hours of arguments Tuesday, and rule in several 
months. 

A decision against Monsanto would be a tremendous boost for the forces mobilizing 
against 
biotechnology. Dozens of activist groups have descended on Canada's frigid capital, 
determined 
to make Schmeiser an international cause celebre. 

They're also hunting for a U.S. Schmeiser to challenge the St. Louis- based company — 
perhaps 
from among the 90 farmers activists say Monsanto has sued for seed theft since 1997. 

"This is so much bigger than Percy," said Nadege Adam of the Council of Canadians, 
which formed 
a coalition of Schmeiser defenders that also includes the Sierra Club (news - web 
sites) of 
Canada and the Washington D.C.-based International Center for Technology Assessment. 

Monsanto, which sold more than $1.6 billion in genetically engineered seeds last year 
after 
spending about $500 million on research and development, has tried to downplay 
Schmeiser's fame. 
The company stresses that it has no choice but to crack down on any farmer using its 
technology 
for free. 

"Clearly, we believe that respect for intellectual property is important," Jordan 
said. "We have 
invested quite a bit in this technology and we expect people to play by the rules and 
we expect 
a return on it." 

For centuries, farmers have improved their crops by culling their best plants and 
husbanding 
seeds for the next planting season. Developing nations see these practices as 
sacrosanct, but 
increasingly threatened by the spread of genetically modified crops, which even 
subsistence 
farmers are required to pay for each year. 

In the end, it's the questions about life itself that have attracted all the attention 
from 
farmers, activists, biotech lobbyists and the international press corps.


 
"Who can patent life, and who owns life, whether it's seeds, plants, animals and so 
on?" 
Schmeiser asked Monday at a news conference. "Those are some of the main issues that 
really 
concern me on a personal level."

Schmeiser views the dispute through a property rights prism, arguing that no 
corporation should 
have the control Monsanto has asserted over the farms where its patented varieties of 
crops are 
grown.

Similar views are strongly held in India, South America and elsewhere in the 
developing world. 
Led by the Indian activist Vandana Shiva, that movement has galvanized around 
Schmeiser, a 
former conservative Catholic member of his provincial parliament and ex-mayor of 
Bruno, 
Saskatchewan (population: 600).

Schmeiser has visited 40 countries in the last two years, receiving standing ovations 
from 
organic farming conventions and anti-biotech rallies from Marin County, Calif. to 
Osaka, Japan. 
Worldwide donations have poured in.

Still, Schmeiser has paid a steep price for refusing to settle. He owes Monsanto about 
$140,000 
in judgments, amassed legal fees of $230,000, and has rented out all but 140 acres of 
his farm.

"The stress this has caused my family is unreal," said Schmeiser, who considers 
himself an 
accidental activist.

"It was not by choice," he said. "I'd rather be fishing with my 15 grandchildren."

___

On the Net:

Schmeiser: http://www.percyschmeiser.com

Monsanto: http://www.monsanto.com

Canada Supreme Court: http://www.scc-csc.gc.ca/Welcome/ index_e.asp


  • [ecofem] AP: Small Canadian Farmer Fights Monsanto Will Affleck-Asch