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La Via Campesina welcomes UN preliminary recognition of peasant's rights

Press Release – La Via Campesina

La Via Campesina welcomes UN preliminary recognition of peasant's  rights

(Jakarta, February 12, 2010) The international peasant's movement  La Via Campesina welcomes the preliminary UN recognition of the role  and rights of peasants and small farmers in the world. The Fourth  Session of the Advisory Committee of the UN Human Rights Council, who  met in Geneva on 25-29 January 2010, adopted the report of the  Advisory Committee titled “Discrimination in the Context of Right to  Food” (A/HRC/AC/4/2). This report describes the marginalisation of  peasants, rural women and traditional fishing, hunting, and herding  communities. It also explains the work of La Via Campesina in  establishing the rights of peasants and fully adopts La Via  Campesina’s Declaration of Rights of Peasants, including it in the  report's annexes.

According to Henry Saragih, General Coordinator of Via Campesina who  addressed the Committee in Geneva on January 27, “It is a very  important step for the defence of our rights. We now urge all the  member countries to adopt this declaration during the March session of  the UN Human Rights Council. We are asking for a new legal framework  with clear standards to recognise the basic rights of more than 2,2  billion of peasants in the world”.

Marginalisation, exclusion and repression of peasants and small farmers  has been going on for centuries, and La Via Campesina has been  struggling for the recognition of the rights of peasant – men and  women- since 2002. In this prossess, Henry Saragih aalso ddressed the  UN General Assembly in April 2009 in New York at the dialogue on the  Global Food Crisis and the Right to Food.

However, the breakout of the food crisis in 2007-2008 revealed to all,  including policy makers, governments and institutions, the severity of  the situation. This crisis raised the number of undernourished people  worldwide to more than one billion, among which 80% live in rural  areas (smallholder farmers, landless, and agricultural workers...).  Meanwhile profit makers in the sector of food production have been  increasing their benefits. While the rhetoric of transnational  corporations seems convincing (when they say that they can feed the  world), the stark food shortages and speculation only confirm that it  is misleading.

Therefore the recognition and the defence of peasant's rights is an  unavoidable condition if we want to feed the world and combat hunger  and poverty.

In August 2008, the Advisory Committee recognised the positive role of  peasants and small farmers in the world food system and began to look  very carefully on the nature of the food situation, the role and  rights of peasants, and the types of discriminations, obligations, and  good practices. As a result, the current report recognises that many  small farmers cannot feed themselves and their communities because  they are losing control over their productive resources, such as land,  water and seeds. Those resources are being increasingly controlled by  agrochemical giants and transnational food producers.

La Via Campesina is now calling all the UN member states to support  this new resolution at the March session of the UN Human Rights  Council. The movement also asks all its members and allies to raise  awareness among their governments on the importance of adopting this  resolution in order to combat hunger and bring social justice  worldwide.