|
"The
WTO Kills Farmers"
In Memory of Lee Kyung Hae
By
Laura Carlsen | September 11, 2003
On
September 10, opening day of the Fifth Ministerial of the
World Trade Organization, Lee Kyung Hae climbed the fence
that separates the excluded from the included and took his
life with a knife to the heart.
Lee,
leader of the Korean Federation of Advanced Farmers Association,
had been excluded for most of his professional life. A farmer
working with farmers, he watched as hundreds of his neighbors
were driven off their lands and separated from the only livelihood
they knew. He spoke eloquently and passionately of the death
of hope in the Korean countryside, the sense of impotence
and the anger against policies that promoted imports over
national production.
So
Lee decided to fight that exclusion by going straight to its
source. Earlier this year, he staged a one-man hunger strike
in front of WTO headquarters in Geneva, in protest of the
draft proposals for the Cancun meeting. He was ignored. Seven
months later, he joined the march of over 15,000 farmers,
indigenous people, and youth in Cancun wearing a sandwich
board that read "The WTO Kills Farmers" and holding
a firm conviction in his still-beating heart. When the protesters
reached the point where they could go no farther, he plunged
a knife into his heart and was soon pronounced dead in a Cancun
hospital just miles from where WTO Ministers deliberated on
how to promote the same agricultural trade that drove Lee,
and hundreds more farmers in Korea, India, and other developing
countries, to such a drastic end.
But
it is a more fitting tribute to let Lee tell his own story,
from a statement he distributed in Geneva and later minutes
before his death in Cancun:
I am 56 years old, a farmer from South Korea who has strived
to solve our problems with the great hope in the ways to organize
farmers' unions. But I have mostly failed, as many other farm
leaders elsewhere have failed.
Soon
after the Uruguay Round Agreement was sealed, we Korean farmers
realized that our destinies are no longer in our own hands.
We cannot seem to do anything to stop the waves that have
destroyed our communities where we have been settled for hundreds
of years. To make myself brave, I have tried to find the real
reason and the force behind those waves. And I reached the
conclusion, here in front of the gates of the WTO. I am crying
out my words to you, that have for so long boiled in my body:
*
I ask: for whom do you negotiate now? For the people, or for
yourselves?
* Stop basing your WTO negotiations on flawed logic and mere
diplomatic gestures.
* Take agriculture out of the WTO system.
Since (massive importing) we small farmers have never been
paid over our production costs. What would be your emotional
reaction if your salary dropped to a half without understanding
the reasons?
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. 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?
Widely
paved roads lead to large apartments, buildings, and factories
in Korea. Those lands paved now were mostly rice paddies built
by generations over thousands of years. They provided the
daily food and materials in the past. Now the ecological and
hydrological functions of paddies are even more crucial. Who
will protect our rural vitality, community traditions, amenities,
and environment?
I
believe that farmers' situation in many other developing countries
is similar. We have in common the problem of dumping, import
surges, lack of government budgets, and too many people. Tariff
protection would be the practical solution.
I
have been so worried watching TV and hearing the news that
starvation is prevalent in many Less Developed Countries,
although the international price of grain is so cheap. Earning
money through trade should not be their means of securing
food. They need access to land and water. Charity? No! Let
them work again!
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.
Otherwise the false logic of neoliberalism will wipe out the
diversity of global agriculture and be disastrous to all human
beings.
Laura Carlsen <laura@irc-online.org>
is director of the IRC's Americas Program. She wrote this
commentary from Cancun, Mexico.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Published
by the Americas Program at the Interhemispheric Resource Center
(IRC). ©2003. All rights reserved.
Recommended
citation:
Laura Carlsen, ""The WTO Kills Farmers:" In
Memory of Lee Kyung Hae," Americas Program (Silver City,
NM: Interhemispheric Resource Center, September 11, 2003).
Web
location:
http://www.americaspolicy.org/columns/amprog/2003/0309lee.html

|