‘Suicide Seeds’ Could Spell Death of Peasant Agriculture, UN Meeting Told
UNITED NATIONS – Groups fighting for the rights of peasant communities are stepping up pressure on governments to ban the use of genetically modified ”suicide seeds” at UN-sponsored talks on biodiversity in Spain this week.
”This technology is an assault on the traditional knowledge, innovation, and practices of local and indigenous communities,” said Debra Harry, executive director of the U.S.-based Indigenous Peoples Council on Biocolonialism.
The group is among organizations urging United Nations experts to recommend that governments adopt tough laws against field testing and selling Terminator technology, which refers to plants that have had their genes altered so that they render sterile seeds at harvest. Because of this trait, some activists call Terminator products ”suicide seeds.”
Developed by multinational agribusinesses and the U.S. government, Terminator has the effect of preventing farmers from saving or replanting seeds from one growing season to the next.
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