vendredi, 10 juillet 2009 - abcBurkina
  • Français
  • Español
  • English
 
The Sedelan
Who are we?
Services and products
Friends of the Earth
Burkina Faso
De A à Z
The rural world
Rural organizations
Tales
Photo gallery
Our files
View of the South
The milk sector
Agricultural policy
GMO file
The EPA's
Cotton News
Rice File
The food crisis
Food sovereignty
Newsletter

Suscribe to get our weekly newsletter now!




Syndication
Suivez les articles "Vu au Sud - Vu du sud"
199) West African farmers and citizens are called upon to unite and jointly defend food sovereignty Print E-mail

West African farmers and citizens are called upon to unite and jointly defend food sovereignty in the region

A few days ago we received the following communication:

The regional forum on food sovereignty organised by ROPPA (Network of farmers organisations and agricultural producers – Réseau des organisations paysannes et producteurs agricoles) will take place in Niamey, Nigeria, November 7-10 2006.

The terms of reference of the forum can be found on the Internet and read as follows:

3.2. Purpose of the Forum

To make the major private and public interest groups come to a common understanding on the issue of food sovereignty and work out proposals on measures and strategies to promote and defend food sovereignty in West Africa.

This regional forum on food sovereignty will be a success, insofar as it enables West African farmers to find allies among the urban population. Indeed, at the last World Social Forum in Bamako, it was obvious that the farmers in the Sub-Saharan countries were already convinced of the need to promote food sovereignty, in order to ensure a future for the region.

It is however difficult to see how farmers could manage this task single-handedly. They need to find supporters among the townspeople. In our view this is possible. In fact the move in this direction has already begun. In writing these lines, I am thinking specifically of the students in Ouagadougou, who turned out in great numbers in November 2005 (in preparation of the ministerial WTO Conference in Hong Kong). They organised debates on the subject of food sovereignty as well as on campus projections of the film “Africa in Danger”.

This issue, I believe, is above all a matter of dignity and common sense. Let us take the example of Burkina Faso. All industrial products in the country (paper, ink, pencils … motorcycles, cars, computers, cameras…) are imported. The currency comes from abroad as well: the CFA franc is just a Euro in disguise! When on top of it all the food in Burkina Faso is also imported (into a nation where 80% of the population are farmers and livestock herders), can anyone reasonably yet speak of sovereignty or independence?!

It is for these reasons that I find it urgent to co-ordinate our actions and seek out allies in towns and cities, in the first place among trade unions and consumer associations. A petition, circulated in 2005 on fair trade and food sovereignty stated: “We refuse to be the waste dump of the world.” As news of the toxic waste discharged in Abidjan has unfolded, it is no longer necessary to demonstrate the relevance of that statement. The moment is therefore right to find additional forms of co-operation. Farmers and citizens are called upon to join hands in setting up new alliances.

Koudougou, September 15 2006
Maurice Oudet
Director, SEDELAN

 
Nos Documents
La révolution blanche est-elle possible au Burkina Faso, et plus largement en Afrique de l'Ouest?
Quelle stratégie adopter pour lutter contre la pauvreté ?
Les filières rizicoles en Afrique de l'Ouest et la nécessité de la souveraineté alimentaire
L'ECOWAP en français facile
Protéger la paysannerie pauvre dans un contexte de mondialisation
Burkina Pictures
Last Articles
Most Read
Home arrow View of the South arrow 199) West African farmers and citizens are called upon to unite and jointly defend food sovereignty