Take Action to Stop Terminator Seeds Demands
WCC General Secretary
World Council Of Churches - 15.05.06
The general secretary of the World
Council of Churches, Rev. Dr Samuel Kobia, called upon churches and
ecumenical partners to take action to stop "terminator technology".
"Applying technology to design sterile seeds turns life, which
is a gift from God, into a commodity. Preventing farmers from re-planting
saved seed will increase economic injustice all over the world and add
to the burdens of those already living in hardship," stated Kobia.
He underlined: "Terminator
technology locates food sovereignty, once the very backbone of community,
in the hands of technologists and large corporations. The UN Food and
Agriculture Organization estimates that 1.4 billion people depend on
farmer-saved seed as their primary seed source. All Christians pray
"Give us this day our daily bread" (Matt 6:11). That this
profoundly material request appears in this profoundly spiritual prayer,
signals for us the centrality of food in our lives, as well as the indivisibility
of the material and spiritual in the eyes of God. It is of great concern
to me that life itself is now often thought of and used as a commodity."
Governments upheld the international de facto moratorium on "Terminator
technology," which refers to plants that are genetically engineered
to produce sterile seeds, about a month ago at the Eighth meeting of
the Conference of the Parties (COP8) to the UN's Convention on Biological
Diversity (CBD) held in Curitiba, Brazil. They finally gave in to strong
pressure by social movements and civil society groups and a number of
governmental delegations supporting their claims. The UN conference
was held in Brazil only weeks after the WCC's 9th General Assembly in
Porto Alegre, Brazil, where delegates urged the WCC to respond to the
challenges posed by science and technology.
The call for a ban on sterile-seed
technology had taken center stage at the two-week meeting in Curitiba.
Thousands of peasant farmers, including those from Brazil's Landless
Workers Movement (Movimento Sem Terra), protested daily outside the
conference center to demand a ban. The women of the international peasant
farmers' organization Via Campesina staged a silent protest inside the
plenary hall on 23 March, holding hand-painted signs with the words
"Terminar Terminator con la Vida" ("Terminate Terminator
with Life").
Brazil and India have already passed national laws to ban Terminator
- and other campaigns to prevent commercialization of seed sterilization
technologies will follow in various countries around the world. Protestant
churches in Germany lobby for a national law and European Union legislation
to ban terminator seeds. They also argue against the patenting of terminator
technologies.
"Though the international moratorium on Terminator was upheld at
COP8, the battle to block the technology is now moving to the national
level. This requires us to alert our member churches and ecumenical
partners to be vigilant in their respective countries," explains
the WCC general secretary who is confident that this concern unites
Christian churches and people of other faiths who care for small scale
farmers and God's creation.