Indo-US KIA :Another hazardous deal
 By *Kavitha Kuruganti*  deccan herald ** ** *The KIA is about changing
domestic regulation in agriculture to promote and protect US commercial
interests.*

As a person engaged in agricultural issues, I am quite shocked yet again
about the fact that Indian farming is out of the radar map of most political
parties - Left, Right or Centre - and the media in the country. The whole
nation seems to be besieged by the 123 nuclear deal with a raging debate on
various perspectives around it. However, there has not been a whimper heard
on the Indo-US Knowledge Initiative on Agriculture (KIA), hailed as the
harbinger of the second green revolution in the country.

Signed during Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's US visit in July 2005, this
bilateral deal is ignored even as the agricultural establishment happily
plods on with KIA's implementation. This is all the more surprising and
unacceptable given the many parallels that exist between the two deals. For
one thing, both the deals were signed without any consultation or
discussions within Indian Parliament. In fact, the KIA should have been
discussed at the state level also given that agriculture is their
constitutional domain too.

While the 123 deal is geared to secure India's support of US foreign policy,
the KIA is about changing Indian domestic regulation in agriculture and
allied sectors to promote and protect American commercial interests thus
taking care of the two most powerful lobbies in the US ( arms and
agri-business).



<https://www.online.citibank.co.in/portal/Landingmaster.jsp?TID=t1&PID=rca&CID=t1a1p39c1&LMS=RCA$RCAO$DDB$DEHVO180$DEHVO180$DECCANHERALD&form_id=frmtp_rca>

In both the deals, there are international agreements being ignored by the
US. They have not signed the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) or the
Kyoto Protocol or the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety.

It is interesting to note that the main themes of these protocols to which
India subscribes to through ratification and which US discounts or fights in
the international arena - biological resources including biodiversity,
climate change and safety with regard to living modified organisms - are
ironically key parts of the KIA. While in the case of the Nuclear Non
Proliferation Treaty, the US is violating something that it is a signatory
to, in the case of KIA, it even refuses to acknowledge the basic tenets that
India subscribes to. This does not seem to hurt Indian principles or
sentiments.

There have been no analyses of past performance that have informed the
present deals - of the civilian nuclear programme in India or of the
agricultural establishment. India's nuclear programme is known for its lack
of accountability and opaque functioning in addition to its unimpressive
performance. When it comes to the KIA, there was no balance sheet drawn up
on the Green Revolution (GR) to assess the benefits and the negative impacts
and no lessons were drawn and articulated. The deals also centre around
classifying and categorising certain technologies as "clean" - nuclear and
transgenics. However, there are strong arguments and evidences in both cases
that break these myths on which the deals are being rationalised.

Nuclear energy, right from the mining stage to the waste disposal stage is
hazardous just as transgenic technology carries many unknown and known
hazards with it. In reality, they are not clean, in front of other
successful alternatives - whether it is renewables in the energy sector or
ecological farming in the agriculture sector.

It is interesting to note that there are no new commercial nuclear reactors
that have been set up even in the US since 1996. On the other side, there is
growing resistance against transgenic technology globally. There are more
bans and GM-free zones in the world today than five years ago. India however
wants to function in an old mindset.

Both the deals have raised concerns about exclusive rights that will accrue
to the US or rights denied to India. In the case of the KIA, the concerns
are centred around monopolistic commercial rights in the form of
Intellectual Property Rights. Bio-piracy legitimised through the KIA has
been a repeated concern from groups that have studied the KIA. Prima facie,
the KIA is already violating many of the Collaborative Research guidelines
notified by the MoEF under the Biological Diversity Act.

>From all accounts, the ostensible targets of both these deals are quite
unimpressive by themselves, even if we put aside other issues for a while.
What they set out to change at the policy level are clearly worrisome. The
KIA in fact needs to be discussed a lot more on precisely those grounds -
the implications for the vast majority of Indians due to policy and
regulatory changes in
farming.

One did not hear much opposition from political parties within the UPA or
its opponents on the KIA. While nuclear scientists are positioning
themselves in nationalist hues by raising several arguments against the 123
deal, very few agricultural scientists have even bothered to look at the KIA
critically!

Unfortunately, the parallels also extend to the fact that voices that argue
on fundamental grounds against both deals are sidelined from the debate
completely.

It can be shown that both energy and agricultural produce demands in India
can be catered to only if we recast our definitions of development into
definitions that question unsustainable aspirations and resource use.

Coming back to the KIA, it is important that the country as a whole debates
its national development priorities including food security and sovereignty,
improvements in the livelihoods of the invisible millions and the
implications of the KIA in the context of the current crisis in Indian
farming.

*(The writer is Consultant with the Centre for Sustainable Agriculture,
Hyderabad.*)

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
 To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
 To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth?hl=en-GB
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to