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UN General Assembly Receives Peasants’ rights declaration

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By witnessradio.org Team  

The “UN Declaration on the rights of peasants and other people working in rural areas” was presented in the UN headquarters to the Third Committee of the General Assembly on 25th October. This follows a nearly two-decade long process of consultations and negotiations led by millions of peasants from La Vía Campesina, along with pastoralists, artisanal fisher folk, agricultural workers and indigenous peoples’ organizations.

 

The Declaration, if accepted would ensure that the rights of rural populations are better recognized and protected by the international community.

 

Apparently, communities world over suffer from hunger and poverty at a disproportionate level due to massive land evictions among other issues. It is estimated that out of 821 million people suffering from hunger in the world (2018 UN figure), 80% live in rural areas. Such Communities are particularly vulnerable and discriminated, face forced expulsions and lack access to essential resources: land, seeds, loans, education, justice and other basic services.

 

“Rural peasants have unequal access and control over land, genetic resources and other natural resources; suffer from restricted access to markets and means of production to ensure a decent livelihood and are constantly imposed agricultural policies skewed in favor of elite farmers and of industrial agriculture” said by a statement issued by La Vía Campesina.

 

La Vía Campesina further stated that on average, small food producers contribute up to 70% of the world’s food, with this figure rising to more than 80% in so-called developing countries. Small scale food producers also play a decisive role in the fight against climate change and biodiversity conservation.

 

“There is no free and healthy citizen without free peasants: our freedoms and rights are prerequisites of the right to food, social justice and democracy for all mankind. This Declaration will provide a universal Human Rights frame to all the efforts and initiatives we peasants, all around the globe, take to feed our communities in locally adapted and sustainable ways, displaying great resilience, inventiveness and perseverance. For us, it is a vital source of legitimacy as it recognizes, in a single and coherent manner our existence, our specificities, our values but also our role to achieve food sovereignty, foster rural development, and sustain human life on Earth. We call for the widest support to the Declaration as it both gathers and globalizes the basic protections vital to our continuation and our development in such as changing world. Vincent Delobel, an organic goat herder from Belgium.

 

A vast majority of the citizens support the Declaration. The European Economic and Social Committee has shown its support, and the European Parliament voted a resolution asking EU states to back the project. On 2nd October this year in France, the National Advisory Committee on Human Rights urged the French government, in an advisory opinion, to back the text. The Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) has also expressed its support to the Declaration and so has the former rapporteur on the Right to Food, Olivier de Schutter as well as his successor, Hilal Elver.

 

On 28 September, 2018 at Palais des Nations, home of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, 33 member states voted in favour and 3 voted against (Australia, Hungary and the United Kingdom) the adoption of the Declaration, while 11 of them abstained.

 

For the sake of consistency with the Paris Agreements on climate, the commitment to the Sustainable Development Goals 2030 (in particular Goal 2 to eradicate hunger) , the UN Decade of family farming and the commitments announced by the European diplomacy to build a fairer and more sustainable world, our governments should have the courage to take the right decision and to vote clearly and unanimously in favor of the Declaration, the statement reads in part

 

Peasants state that such an instrument is a symbolic recognition of the fundamental role of small

scale food producers worldwide who work hard to make a living and feed people, and hearten rural communities.

 

“The world needs this Declaration to foster sustainable food systems all over the planet and to make the world safer, statement ended

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