Thursday, November 30, 2017

বাংলাদেশ কৃষি ফার্ম শ্রমিক ফেডারেশনের সেপ্টেম্বর ও অক্টোবর মাসের কার্যক্রমের সংবাদপত্রে প্রকাশিত সংবাদ।


















Tuesday, August 8, 2017

STOP GOLDEN RICE! Network

August 8, 2017
Press Statement

Asia farmers‘ network resound strong call to Stop Golden Rice!

Stop Golden Rice! Defend our Farmers‘ Rights! remains the resounding call of Asia farmers‘ network against the impending commercialization of Golden Rice in Asia. Four years after the militant uprooting of Golden Rice, waves of protest mobilizations stirs anew in the Philippines and Bangladesh against its commercialization, while debate rages on in Indonesia, India and other Asian countries where Golden Rice is planned for commercial release.

Today, a protest campaign in front of Bangladesh Rice Research Institute (BRRI) was held by hundreds of farmers and civil society supporters led by the National Women Farmers and Workers Association (NWFA) and Bangladesh Agricultural Farm Labour Federation (BAFLF).  A public forum on GMOs and Golden Rice was also held by NWFA and BAFLF few days back last August 4-5 in Gazipur to bring the public issue to the fore.  

Nasrin Sultana of NWFA explained that “Since 2006, we have consistently protested and even formed a barricade in BRRI against Golden Rice. We denounce the government approval of Golden Rice commercialization. The public must be alarmed with the great risks of Golden Rice consumption to food safety and public health. Golden rice commercialization equates to billions worth of annual corporate profit in expanse of consumers’ health and farmers’ seed freedom. This cannot be allowed”.  

The Golden Rice debate is marred by conflicts and controversy.  After decades of research, the efficacy, safety and viability of Golden Rice remains uncertain and pose grave threat to food safety and consumers’ health. It is within this ground that government of China and academic journal publishers sanctioned and retracted the research work of scientists who engaged in unethical feeding of Golden Rice to children whose families were not informed that they were being fed Golden Rice last 2012. To date, there are no published reports proving that Golden Rice is safe for human consumption. Add to this the recent published study stating that Golden Rice is unfit for commercial cultivation due to poor agronomic performance leading to low yield.

Aliansi Gerakan Reform Agrari (AGRA), a national peasant federation in Indonesia in statement expressed that “Indonesia, as with the whole region, is also threatened by the growing corporate control over agriculture and consequent erosion of traditional seed resources. The government promotes GMOs and 80-90% of our soybeans and corn imports are GMOs. The Indonesia National Food Policy proclaimed to boost volume of food production, mainly rice production with the application of genetic engineering of 19 food crops, primarily rice, corn, sorghum, and soybean. Golden Rice will be an eventual real threat to our farmers, making it an imperative for us to campaign and support the Asia wide campaign against Golden Rice commercialization”

India host two-thirds of the world’s rice varieties. Campaigns in India have gained momentum against genetically engineered rice, including the Save our Rice network, the Folk Rice Movement and the Seed Mothers movement; all working to conserve and salvage thousands of traditional and indigenous seed varieties which would have otherwise been eroded by the onslaught of hybrid technology and conventional chemical inputs in the past decades. Recent news on the establishment of IRRI's South Asia's Regional Centre in city of Varanasi in the last quarter of 2017 have raised alarm as it may serve as a pretext to the government’s aggressive move to commercialize genetically engineered rice.  The bitter tragedy hundred thousands of farmers succumbing to suicide in the past decade is linked with debt chains acquired from the seed monopoly of Monsanto thru BT Cotton in the cotton belt region remain to haunt the country.

In Philippines, the Golden Rice issue was stirred anew with the renewed application for field trial and direct use last February 2017 despite the absence of public dialogue. To commemorate the historic uprooting and protest action against golden rice last August 8, 2013, hundreds of farmers will gather to hold a public forum in Nueva Ecija in Central Luzon, the rice granary of the country where Philippine Rice Research Insitute (PhilRICE) Golden Rice experimental fields are located. A civil society roundtable discussion on August 10 and a public dialogue between government and civil society will also be on August 11 within the national capital to re-echo public opposition against Golden Rice.

“Golden Rice is a greedy scientific enterprise of IRRI and corporations masked as humanitarian aid. It deviates from the real solution to malnutrition which is to fight poverty, uphold genuine agrarian reform and promote diverse nutritious, natural and easily accessible food sources. Its ultimate interest is to secure top profit arena and monopoly control of global food system since billions rely, produce and consume rice. The looming Golden Rice commercialization anchored on neoliberal market will flood the region with massive and unregulated trade of GM rice. This spells doom to our country where the quantitative restriction on rice importation will soon be lifted. Golden rice is a death reaper to our local local rice sector as traditional rice varieties will be vulnerable to GMO contamination. Stop Golden Rice! is a call to defend life and freedom against this oppressive claws of corporate control” stated by Cristino Panerio, National Coordinator of the Magsasaka at Siyentipiko para sa Pag-unlad ng Agrikultura (MASIPAG), a local farmer-scientist movement in the forefront of campaigns against golden rice commercialization in the past decade.

Since its inception in 2001, Syngenta (currently merged with ChemChina), Rockefeller Foundation, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation among others have poured millions of funds thru the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) in the research and promotion of Golden Rice, a genetically engineered rice touted to address Vitamin A deficiency. But, strong and consistent peoples’ protests in the past decades impeded its planned commercialization particularly in Bangladesh, Philippines and India.

In August 8, 2013, more than 400 farmers led the historic uprooting of Golden Rice experimental fields at Pili, Camarines Sur to signal strong opposition to Golden rice trials and commercialization. Corporate proponents thru their media mouthpieces, such as Mark Lynas ang Patrick Moore, vilified the farmers’ direct action. The peasant movement in the Philippines, however, reiterated their dissent against Golden Rice as a legitimate conviction to defend rights against corporate control of agriculture thru GMOs.

An Asia Farmers’ Conference against Golden Rice was subsequently held in 2014 with more than 70 farmers, people’s organizations from the region echoing their stand against Golden Rice. The campaigns proved successful as it triggered broader public attention, institutional debate and exposed the deceitful corporate claims on the Golden Rice issue in the national and international arena – ultimately leading to postponement of its commercialization.###


Established in 2014 and reconvened this 2017, the Stop Golden Rice! Network is a regional campaign collaboration of more than 30 organizations in South Asia and South East Asia. It works against the commercialization of Golden Rice and other forms of genetically modified crops, towards a society with equity, food sovereignty, sustainable and ecology-based agriculture. This is joint statement of its lead convening organizations and networks.

For more details please contact:

Ms Ana Christina Bibal
Project Coordinator
STOP GOLDEN RICE! Network
09171433109 / stopgrnetwork@gmail.com

STOP GOLDEN RICE! Network members:

RESIST! Agri-TNCs Network- Philippines, MASIPAG (Magsasaka at Siyentipiko para sa Pag-unlad ng Agrikultura), KMP (Kilusang Mangbubukid ng Pilipinas), PNSFP (Philippine Network for Food Security Programs), SIBAT (Sibol ng Agham at Teknolohiya), HEAD (Health action for Democracy), PAN Phils (Pesticide Action Network-Phils, TFIP (Philippine Task Force for Indigenous Peoples Rights), CENDI (Community Entrepreneur Development Institute), SRD (Center for Sustainable Rural Development), Vietnam, SPFT (Southern Peasants Federation of Thailand), AGRA (Alliance of Agrarian Reform Movement), SERUNI National Women’s Alliance, Indonesia, NWFA (National Women Farmers and Workers Association), BAFLF (Bangladesh Agricultural Farm Labour Federation), SHISUK (Shikha Shastha Unnayan Karzakram), Bangladesh, APVUU (Andhra Pradesh Vyavasaya Vruthidarula Union), ORRISSA (Organization for Rural Reconstruction and Integrated Social Services Activities), CREATE, India THANAL, India, Save Our Rice Network, India, PAN-INDIA (Pesticide Action Network-India), India, GRAIN, PAN-AP (Pesticide Action Network-Asia Pacific), APC (Asian Peasants Coalition), Consumers Union of Japan, Women’s Development Federation WELIGEPOLA, MONLAR, Sri Lanka
















Tuesday, May 2, 2017

News Release
1st May 2017

Workers of the world, unite!

Farmers and agriculture workers on Labour Day to demand permanent job, living wage, safe work place and right to organize.

National Women Farmers and Workers Association (NWFA) and Bangladesh Agricultural Farm Labour Federation (BAFLF) observed International Labour Day demanding exploitation free society by upholding workers’ rights.  To mark the International Labour Day, a colorful rally was brought out from Gazipur Chourasta returning back from in front of Gazipur D.C. office and ended at BARI headquarters and then a short discussion meeting was held there. Agriculture workers, women and small farmers joint the rallies to press their demands. Among others Rima Akter, Suprovat Rojario, Norjahan Begum of NWFA, Abdul Mazid, Lahaj Uddin Lahun, Abdul Latif, Md. Mamun and Md Rahimuddin of BAFLF spoke on the occasion.

Abdul Mazid, General Secretary of BAFLF, said ‘workers toil factories, farm and homes and they are the biggest part of our economy but, unfortunately, workers are exploited and deprived from the rights that are theirs by law. Workers in different sectors are still struggling for the right to unionise, safe work place, living wage, job security and health service’. He urged govt. to make workers’ rights a priority and take measures to stop workers’ harassment and illegal termination, to abolish precarious work.

On behalf of NWFA & BAFLF, flowing demands are placed from the meeting:

1.    Permanent employment with retirement benefit
2.    Maximum eight hours working time at all places and paid weekly holidays
3.    Equal opportunity and fair wages for women workers
4.    Paid six months paid maternity leave
5.    Ensuring living wage and safe and secured work place
6.    Permanent wage commission for all workers including informal sector workers
. Trade union rights for all  




Wednesday, March 22, 2017

‘World Water Day 2017’

Access to water and sanitation facilities for small farmers, agriculture workers and rural women.

Climate change, urbanization with growing population are associated effect on the quality and supply to pre urban and rural communities where water resources are stressed and surface pollution from toxic metal, organic materials and other pollutants is widespread.

Naturally occurring arsenic in shallow groundwater threatens the health of millions of people. This is particularly problematic for rural people specially women and working poor communities as arsenic contamination mainly exists outside of the cities.

High salinity in surface and ground water have become a major problem in Bangladesh Here the groundwater levels continue to decline at a rate of up to 9 feet per year. People in the saline-prone area have been facing the crisis of drinking water for the years. Saline water has intruded into rivers and other water bodies and results acute crisis of safe drinking water and water for irrigation, affecting thousands of people as well as small farmers, agriculture workers, women and rural poor.

The people of remote mountain areas in the Hill Tracts are also facing the same drinking water shortage and agony for water particularly in the dry season for many years. There are no proper sanitation facilities to hilly areas. There are many areas in those areas which have no tube-well within miles of the localities. In some areas, tube-wells have been gone out of water for many years and many areas where the tube-wells are in order, but no water. So, the women of the localities would have to depend on sources of surface water such as waterfall, canal and ponds which is impure and unsafe for drinking. Thus the people of the hilly areas suffer from water related diseases after drinking the water.

Carrying water for drinking and household use is time-consuming and troublesome job. In the family, women, mainly, do this task of water management. The women have to spend about 4-5 hours per day to collect water depending on the season and region. In saline prone area women have to walk about 2km twice to fetch to pitchers of water from the nearest pond. Climbing up the hills with jars full of water from the plane land by women and girls is a common picture of the remote mountainous areas in Chittagong Hill Tracts. Specially, the responsibility of water supply for sanitation lay with the women. It affects their health, education, rest and relaxation.


Bangladesh Agricultural Farm Labour Federation (BAFLF) and National Women Farmers and Workers Association (NWFA) observed World Water Day 2017 with the slogan ‘SAFE WATER & SANITATION IS OUR HUMAN RIGHT!’ On the occasion BAFLF & NWFA jointly arranged a rally as a part of starting campaign for access to water and sanitation facilities for small farmers, agriculture workers and rural women.