{"id":1098,"date":"2021-09-27T11:50:09","date_gmt":"2021-09-27T11:50:09","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/rootsforequity.org\/?p=1098"},"modified":"2021-10-20T11:05:35","modified_gmt":"2021-10-20T11:05:35","slug":"farmers-reject-united-nations-food-systems-summit-unfss","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/rootsforequity.org\/?p=1098","title":{"rendered":"Farmers Reject United Nations Food Systems Summit (UNFSS)"},"content":{"rendered":"\n

Press Release | 22 September 2021<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n

Roots for Equity and Pakistan Kissan Mazdoor Tehreek held the\nNational Food Systems Summit at Renewal Center, Lahore on September 22, 2021. The National Summit was held as national\nmobilization towards the Global People\u2019s Summit (GPS) for Just,\nEquitable, Healthy and Sustainable Food Systems. The GPS has been organized\nthrough the coordinated efforts of peoples\u2019 movements and farmers\u2019 movements, a\nunity of more than 21 organizations across the world, and is a Global-South led\ninitiative to counter the United Nations Food Systems Summit (UNFSS) and\nits neoliberal corporate agenda being held on September 23, 2021. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

We, the people, maintain that UNFSS\nhas been overtaken by the private interests of the corporates and elites. Dr.\nAzra Talat Sayeed, Executive Director at Roots for Equity, shed light on how\nthe UNFSS platform is using neoliberal policies to reinforce corporate control\nover food and agriculture through propagating false solutions (e.g. food fortification,\ngenetic modification, industrial meat production systems, monocultural food\nproduction) to climate change, hunger and malnutrition. It is clear that\ncorporate-driven approaches are marginalizing, criminalizing and co-opting\nindigenous knowledge as well as eroding biodiversity through industrializing\nagriculture. The National Food Systems Summit Pakistan aims to counter the\ncorporate-controlled narrative of UNFSS by amplifying people\u2019s demands for\ngenuine food systems transformation. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

Through the panel sessions on land and environmental rights, women\u2019s rights and collective rights over natural, genetic and productive resources, the National Summit highlighted the injustices that prevail in our current corporate-controlled, feudal-controlled food systems. In particular, Asif Khan and Chowdhry Aslam talked about issues of landlessness and corporate capture of genetic and productive resources. Roop Kanwal, a member of PKMT Youth Wing said that a critical issue remains the total control of land by a handful of feudal families in the country and absolute negation of women farmers\u2019 rights, an overwhelming majority of whom are landless. Shaheen Maher said that women agriculture workers receive a pittance for their backbreaking labour, especially working on export-driven crops such as cotton and sugarcane. Malik Aman, PKMT member from Manshera posited that environmental degradation by corporate-led systems are a discord to environmental justice.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Furthermore, the National Summit\nengaged farmers, including women, youth and landless farmers, trade union,\nacademics, civil society and activists from various sectors in a series of\nworkshops. As a contribution to the collective global response of peoples\u2019\nmovements, participating farmers and activists formulated concrete demands and developed\ninitial action plans for achieving food sovereignty through genuine agrarian\nreform, sustainable system change and a radical transformation of the world\u2019s\nfood systems. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

Tahir Mehdi from Punjab Lok Sujag,\nFozia Parveen from LUMS, Neelam Hussain from Simorgh Publications and Tahira\nAbdullah, a human rights defender, also raised key issues during their\ninterventions in the panel sessions. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

Demands: <\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n