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27/06/2008
Declaration
International
Woman Peasant Assembly
On
Peasant Rights
Jakarta, 20
June 2008
We,
women peasants from Colombia, Dominican Republic, South Korea,
Indonesia, Spain, Thailand, Malaysia and East Timor, gathered
in Jakarta and discussed the women peasant situation in the
world.
The
difficult situation in the villages and being landless forces
women to go to the city and elsewhere abroad to look for jobs
as low pay workers. There is poverty in the villages and
women do not have enough income to feed the family, so hunger
and malnutrition are increasing both in urban and rural areas.
The
responsibility of looking after the family is in the hands of
women and the shortage and uncertainty of health care and
education for the children make women work long hours for low
wages.
Women
who work in the fields and use chemical fertilizers are at
high risk for their health. The use of such fertilizers
threatens both the human body and the environment, especially
when people are illiterate and not able to read the
instructions and have no one to explain how to use the product.
Women
also suffer violence at the hands of their husbands, partners,
or employers. Such violence can be physical or mental and even
life threatening.
The
global agricultural policies imposed by the WTO and the IMF,
today aggravated by the food crisis, force peasants to borrow
money for farming and in the end they are heavily indebted and
have to leave their land as a result. Many peasants commit
suicide when they can not pay the debts, and in many cases
indebtedness forces men to leave rural areas for the cities,
leaving the women to alone be responsible for the farm
households.
Moreover, agrarian conflicts have involved women at the front
line of struggles risking their lives.
Young
people no longer wish to work as peasants because their work
is not socially recognized and therefore insufficiently paid.
Furthermore, to buy land for farming is expensive because of
the speculation due to development or industrialization :
housing, industrial areas, commercial areas, and
infrastructures which raise land prices. In this situation
peasants who have been working in those areas are displaced to
less fertile zones with the accompanying loss of biodiversity.
In
many countries, peasants are not allowed to maintain,
preserve, exchange and grow their own seeds, so the
agricultural knowledge is disappearing and peasants are
obligated to buy seeds from TNCs which just think of their own
profits. These companies are creating GMOs and uniform crops
with the loss of many species and biodiversity in general.
FTAs
agreed by governments without consultation with the people are
imposing food imports that threaten food sovereignty of nations
and neglect the issue of safe and healthy food. As for
the FTA between Korea and US, the beef import from US was the
precondition of the deal. FTA have effect on the country but
also women personally. For instance, through FTAs Indonesia
will export sea food to Japan in exchange for Indonesian
nurses who will work in Japan.
Seeing the difficulties faced by women in our daily lives as
peasants; the International Women’s Assembly on Peasant Rights
held in Jakarta demand:
All
violations of peasant human rights that occur in our daily
lives must stop.
To
implement an International Convention on Peasant Rights as the
struggle for recognition of peasants. This convention is to be
the instrument to uphold the rights of peasants and ensure
fulfillment by governments.
It is
very important that the convention formally recognize the role
of women peasants in agriculture. The women peasant should
have the proper health care and education of the children. |