Title    Suicide at WTO Meeting Highlights Farmers' Plight
  Name ONEWORLD Date 2003-09-13 21:47:09 Hit 2935

Suicide at WTO Meeting Highlights Farmers' Plight
Fri Sep 12, 8:57 AM ET  Add World - OneWorld.net to My Yahoo! 
 

, OneWorld US 

Washington, Sep 12 (OneWorld) -- When Lee Kyang Hae scaled a metal security
fence and plunged a knife into his heart on the first day of the Fifth
Ministerial meeting of the World Trade Organization (news - web sites) (WTO)
in Cancun, Mexico, Wednesday, he was trying to speak for tens of millions of
small farmers around the world who find themselves at the losing edge of
economic globalization. 


Lee, a small farmer who had also served in South Korea (news - web sites)'s
legislature, died at a Cancun hospital shortly afterwards, casting a pall
over the proceedings for which trade ministers and delegations from more than
140 countries have gathered this week. 


Their work may decide the future of agricultural subsidies which many
countries, particularly wealthier ones--including South Korea--use to protect
domestic farm production against foreign competition. 


Just before his suicide, Lee, who staged a one-man hunger strike at WTO
headquarters in Geneva earlier this year, distributed a statement to
reporters and some of the 15,000 small farmers from dozens of countries who
were marching to protest the meeting and the likelihood that decisions taken
there may prove ruinous to their livelihoods and way of life. 


"My warning goes out to all citizens that human beings are in an endangered
situation. That uncontrolled multinational corporations and a small number of
big WTO Members are leading an undesirable globalization that is inhumane,
environmentally degrading, farmer-killing, and undemocratic. It should be
stopped immediately." 


Lee's lament goes to the heart of what is perhaps the single most contentious
issue in international trade today. 


Free-market advocates argue that agricultural producers who can grow crops
most efficiently--that is, at the lowest cost--should be permitted to export
to other markets without tariffs or other trade-distorting barriers, such as
farm subsidies in the importing country, in order to keep global food prices
low and as affordable to as many people as possible. 


Instead of trying to compete with low-cost producers, according to this view,
farmers in other countries who produce the same crop at higher cost should
either grow something else at which they will have a similar competitive
advantage or give up farming altogether and move to the city where they can
get a job in a manufacturing or some other 


sector whose products or services can be sold to yet other markets at
competitive prices. 


This "neo-liberal" philosophy, which guides the WTO and other institutions,
such as the World Bank (news - web sites) and the International Monetary Fund
(news - web sites) (IMF), that oversee the global economy, is precisely what
brought Lee to Cancun and ultimately to his death. 


Due to a succession of global trade agreements, the South Korean government
was required to take measures that would reduce its ability to insulate its
rice farmers, whose production costs have long been quite high by global
standards, from the global market. With government protections reduced, the
price of rice ceased to be competitive with foreign producers, and even less
so as Korean rice farmers recorded five straight years of bumper crops, which
further reduced prices. 


"Since (massive importing of rice), we small farmers have never been paid
over our production costs," Lee wrote. "What would be your emotional reaction
if your salary dropped to a half without understanding the reason?" 


"Farmers who gave up early have gone to urban slums. Others who have tried to
escape from the vicious cycle have met bankruptcy due to accumulated debts,"
he continued. "For me, I couldn't do anything but just look around at the
vacant houses, old and eroding. Once I went to a house where a farmer
abandoned his life by drinking a toxic chemical because of his uncontrollable
debts. I could do nothing but listen to the howling of his wife. If you were
me, how would you feel?" asked Lee, a former president of the Korean National
Future Farmers' and Fishermen's Association. 


The plight of small farmers described by Lee is by no means confined to South
Korea. 


Despite their professed devotion to free-trade principles, major economic
powers--particularly the European Union (news - web sites) (EU) and the
United States--have used their influence in the WTO to retain the ability to
subsidize their agricultural producers, which they continue to do at the rate
of some US$300 billion a year. 


These subsidies have enabled the EU and the U.S., in particular, to flood
much of the rest of the world with their food exports at prices that are far
below the actual costs of production, making it even more difficult for small
farmers in poorer countries, including South Korea--which has become the
highest per capita consumer of U.S. farm products in the world--to compete. 


Similarly, since the signing of the North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA), which required Mexico to lower tariffs on a range of agricultural
goods, corn imports from the U.S. have increased 20-fold, threatening, and,
in some cases, destroying, the livelihoods of millions of small farmers, many
of whom have migrated to the U.S. in search of work, since work is harder to
find in Mexico itself. 


Thus it was no surprise that most of the small farmers who marched with Lee
Wednesday were from maize-producing regions in Mexico. ''I believe that
farmers' situation in many other developing countries is similar," his
statement said. "We have in common the problem of dumping, import surges,
lack of government budgets (support), and too many people." 

In a message to indigenous peoples gathered to protest in Cancun, the leader
of Mexico's peasant-based Zapatista Front agreed, saying: "The products we
sell are not given a fair price, while their products' prices go up all the
time. Everything the poor buy is more and more expensive, and only a few
people benefit and live better, while millions of poor men and women and
children die of hunger and sickness." 

Indian activist Vandana Shiva told the marchers that 650 farmers committed
suicide in just one month. 

The protests, sombered by Lee's death, will continue through the end of the
WTO meeting Sunday. 


Mr. Lee
INDIA WTO PROTEST
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