----- forwarded message -----
Date: Fri, 26 Jan 2001 22:06:11 +0100
From: info <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Brazilian farmers storm Monsanto, uproot plants
----- forwarded message -----
Subject: [EF!] Brazilian farmers storm Monsanto, uproot plants
Date: Fri, 26 Jan 2001 11:25:05 -0800
From: radman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Brazilian farmers storm Monsanto, uproot plants

NAO ME TOQUE, Brazil, Jan 26 (Reuters) - More than a thousand
poor Brazilian farmers, joined by activists attending an anti-World
Economic Forum summit, stormed a biotech plant owned by U.S.
life sciences giant Monsanto (NYSE:MON - news), threatening on
Friday to camp out indefinitely to protest genetically modified (GM)
food.

Some 1,200 workers from settlements of the radical Landless
Workers Movement (MST) in Brazil's southernmost state of Rio Grande do

Sul invaded the plant just before midnight on Thursday, yanking out GM

corn and soybeans crops at Monsanto's experimental farm.

``We're staying here indefinitely,'' said Solet Campolete, a local
MST leader. ``We want to make a statement ... these seeds trick
farmers and create dependency on seeds produced by a big
multinational.''

The MST families took over the research center and warehouses,
hanging hammocks and setting up mattresses and boxes of food. The
protesters scrawled on the walls, ``The seed of death!'' and
``Monsanto is the
end of farmers!''

Monsanto said on Friday it had requested that local authorities
``restore order'' at the unit.

``Monsanto regrets this incident in which it was a victim of an
aggressive movement that puts the rights to freedom of movement and to

private property at risk, but it affirms its confidence in democracy
and a quick reaction by authorities to restore order,'' the company
said in a statement.

ANTI-DAVOS FACTION JOINS PROTEST

Militant farmers from around the globe who are in Brazil for the World

Social Forum, a rival meeting to the World Economic Forum in Davos,
Switzerland, joined the protesters.

Jose Bove, the French farmer and leader of the Confederation Paysanne
who catapulted to fame when he trashed his local McDonald's, took a
four hour bus ride from the state capital of Porto Alegre to lend his
support.

``Monsanto says transgenics require less pesticides and chemicals, but

that's a lie. Transgenics increase dependence on those products,'' he
said.

Monsanto says its lab-enhanced seeds increase productivity and reduce
the use of agrochemicals among other benefits, but watchdog groups
like Greenpeace have opposed the wide-scale use of biotechnology that
they say has not been developed with sufficient environmental and
health impact studies.

They also worry it will force farmers to become dependent on seeds
produced in corporate laboratories rather than on those grown in the
field.

Brazil is the only country in the Western Hemisphere that attempts to
ban the commercial planting, importing or sale of GM food, but they do

allow research.

Still, it has been an ongoing battle with the government often trying
to reverse its position on GM and some farmers smuggling in GM seeds
from neighboring Argentina. Industry insiders suspect up to a third of

Rio Grande do Sul's soybean crop is GM.

The some 10,000 activists united in Porto Alegre for the
``Anti-Davos'' forum are expected to condemn GM food along with a wide

range of what they say are neoliberal and capitalist policies that
have deepened the divide between the rich and poor. MST families have
led protests outside the Monsanto plant but it is the first time they
invaded the facility.


For more information check out the Hayduke Rocks! web site:
http://www.efmedia.org

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