*Prices of basic foods have sharply increased amid a rise in costs of
commodities.*

*The crisis has led to riots in poor countries by people who have limited
access to food.*

http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/D1347B14-5364-45C5-8C46-950C6541801D.htm

*Dr. Vandana Shiva is a physicist, ecologist, activist, editor, and author
of many books. She talks to Al Jazeera about the food crisis in India, and
what can be done to overcome it.*

*Al Jazeera: One of the causes of the huge rises in India's food prices is
the soaring rate of inflation. India is experiencing its highest rate of
inflation in three years. What is behind this increase?*

Dr Shiva: There are a number of reasons why the prices of food commodities
are rising in India. The first is related to economic policies – the
policies of integrating India with global markets.

There is a huge agrarian crisis but it's not from the beginning of our
freedom, it's not a leftover of feudalism. The agrarian crisis is a result
of globalisation.

  *"With the price rise, I can see about 70 to 80 per cent of India will be
pushed into hunger and starvation"*

Dr Vandana Shiva, ecologist
The farmers who are committing suicide in India are precisely in those areas
where genetically engineered cotton is being grown by Monsanto [a chemicals
and agricultural science corporation].

This is a new crisis. A small farmer could make a living in this country a
few years ago. Today, as a result of globalisation, agriculture is being run
down.

We have grown enough wheat in the last few years – 74 million tonnes. We are
still self-reliant in food, but we are being forced to import; both under
the multilateral globalisation free trade agreements as well as under
bilateral arrangements like a crazy treaty called the Agriculture Knowledge
Initiative between the US and India.

It was signed at the same time as the nuclear treaty was signed. The nuclear
agreement has had a lot of political attention. The agriculture treaty has
had absolutely no attention.

Indian farmers are being paid 8,000 rupees [$200] for a tonne of wheat. When
the farmers ask for more, to make a viable living, the government says it
will cause a rise in inflation.

So the government goes to Cargill [a transnational agricultural
corporation] and the United States because of this bilateral agreement and
buys wheat at $400 dollars a tonne, which is 16,000 rupees a tonne – twice
the price that Indian farmers can produce wheat for.

*What effect is that having on ordinary people in India?*

It's having a huge impact. Already, about half of India was not eating full
meals; going through days without food. With the price rise, I can see about
70 to 80 per cent of India will be pushed into hunger and starvation.

  *Your Views*

*How is the rising cost of staple foods affecting
you?*<http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/E9A36960-AB5A-43E7-A637-4628328249EB.htm?&choice=3&dgDiscID=265&dgPoolID=d660414c-e21e-450d-aad5-0f72460777e5>

*Send us your 
views*<http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/B84B85E3-7E69-4D79-8121-746EBEA7B304.htm>
There are two other additional issues that have come up in recent years.
Last year, both the European government and the US government made a 10 per
cent blending requirement and put huge subsidies into biofuels, diverting
food from feeding the hungry to running automobiles. This has driven up
prices of food.

Climate change is creating instability in agriculture. Unfortunately the UN
representative said the new green revolution in Africa would solve these
problems. It is going to make it worse.

A green revolution based on nitrogen fertilisers in 2008 is a recipe for
emissions of nitrogen oxides, further instability of the climate and further
hunger and starvation.

We need to localise food systems. We have enough farmers to produce enough
food in this country [India], if we were not being forced to integrate with
a speculative market.

*There are now calls for some sort of co-ordinated response to the problem –
by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank and the UN. Is
there any short term solution?*

There is a very short term solution – give up the industrial agriculture
using fossil fuels, high cost imports.

Give up the forced linking with an international commodity market. Allow
farmers to grow and give them a just price. We can solve the problem
tomorrow.

I work with 400,000 farmers in India growing organic food. We have doubled
yields and doubled output on farms. Nobody is dying of starvation in the
villages where there is organic farming.

*But do you think governments will look at that as a solution? What has the
government in India done?*

   Indian farmers tend to receive lower prices for
their produce than those in the US and EU [EPA]It has to be the solution.
The Third World does not need charity; the Third World needs food
sovereignty. It needs freedom to produce it own food. Let's just recognise
the ecological endowments – it is Africa and Asia that have the best soils,
the best sun, the best biodiversity.

Never, ever have we had this scale of a problem, except during the great
Bengal famine, which also was driven by so-called free trade.

I'd like to just mention: free trade is not free. Every one of the problems
we have … have been triggered by government policy.

Globalisation is government policy. Trade liberalisation is government
policy. Biofuels is government policy. Climate change is triggered by
government subsidies for fossil fuel use.

If the governments have caused the problem, they cannot now throw up their
hands and say that they cannot intervene. They have created the price rise,
they need to intervene in creating a fair market for famers and ensure the
rights of all.

Food is about life, and the right to life is protected in our constitution.

*If those solutions are not taken, where do you think this will end? Will
there be more food riots in Africa and Asia?*

If the governments continue to make interventions on behalf of the rich,
they can bail out the banks in their absolute unwinding of the financial
crisis – then they can intervene in the market.

But if they refuse to intervene in the market to ensure food prices are
regulated, we will see more riots. Either governments will fall because of
riots or they can become enlightened and not see the pseudo free trade as a
sacred cow that has to be protected.

Food rights of people have to be protected; the rights of the poor have to
be protected. That is the only obligation governments have. Any democratic
government that fails in that duty will only be part of the problem of
creating food wars and food riots.


-- 
Jogesh

Many are concerned about the monuments of the West and the East - to know
who built them.
For my part, I should like to know who in those days did not build them -
who were above such trifling.
- Henry David Thoreau

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