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Iraq: Order 81

Keith Parkins | 27.01.2005 15:55 | Ecology | Repression | Social Struggles

As part of the systematic corporate looting of Iraq, the US is now about to destroy Iraq's agriculture, and in doing so, will destroy a heritage going back at least 10,000 years.


'What America has done is not restructure Iraq's agriculture, but dismantle it. The people whose forefathers first mastered the domestication of wheat will now have to pay for the privilege of growing it for someone else. And with that, the world's oldest farming heritage will become just another subsidiary link in the vast American supply chain.' -- Jeremy Smith

Following the illegal occupation of Iraq, the country was systematically looted.

Shortly after the occupation, George W Bush signed an executive order indemnifying the corporate looters from prosecution.

It is the responsibility of an occupying power to protect the assets of the occupied country. To systematically loot a country constitutes a war crime.

Last year, two females hijacked a conference in London where the spoils of Iraq were to be shared out. They were charged with 'aggravated trespass'. The case was quickly dropped when the government realised war crimes would be aired in court.

An example of the looting of the country is Order 81.

Paul Bremer, former US Iraqi viceroy, signed a number of Orders, that amongst other things, handed the assets of Iraq to US corporations. Order 81 was one such order.

Iraq is the cradle of civilisation. The fertile crescent of ancient Mesopotamia was the world's first wheat belt.

Agriculture is not exempt from the corporate looting of Iraq.

The agricultural sector is to be restructured. Agriculture will be orientated towards world trade, growing food for US corporations, buying inputs from US corporations.

Iraq first cultivated wheat thousands of years ago. Farmers swap their seeds, select out the best varieties suited to their growing conditions. They have done so for generations.

Iraq is so important for wheat, that it had its own seed banks at Abu Ghraib. So important was Abu Ghraib, that a wheat variety was named after the place. Now Abu Ghraib is notorious as the place where the US tortures and humiliates prisoners.

The seed banks at Abu Ghraib have been destroyed. Seeds could be sourced from secondary seed banks in Syria, but these seeds will not be used.

Instead, the US will dictate what varieties of wheat are grown. The US knows best. Under the guise of 'aid', it is 'educating' farmers in what seeds to sow. 10,000 years of seed selection, and the Yankee Imperialists know best.

US corporations will license seeds to farmers.

50% of the wheat grown will be a variety used for pasta. Pasta? Iraqis don't eat pasta. Either it is for export, or the US troops are in for a very long occupation.

Order 81, protects plant patents, intellectual property rights. That is it will protect the rights of US corporations, but not the rights of Iraqi farmers who have been selecting seeds for generations.

As with Percy Schmeiser in Canada, should farmers find their crops have been contaminated with alien genes, then like Percy, they will be prosecuted for theft of intellectual property rights. They may even be prosecuted if their crops have the same characteristics as crops 'owned' by US corporations.

Currently, 97% of Iraqi farmers save their seeds

Whether or not the war on Iraq was illegal, whether or not you care about the human rights abuses in Iraq, Order 81 should be of concern to all of us.

The global food system is in crisis and facing meltdown. Agribusiness has been an unmitigated disaster. Global warming will make a bad situation worse. We can no longer rely on the wheat belts and the soya belts when crops fail elsewhere.

Iraq is where wheat was first cultivated. It is the one place in the world where we cannot afford agribusiness and the elimination of traditional varieties. One day soon, we will be very dependent upon these varieties.

Seedy Sunday are organising the 4th annual community seed swap on Sunday 6 February 2005 at the Old Market, Hove, Sussex.

A mass anti-Monsatan, anti-GM lobby of Parliament and the Welsh Assembly, takes place on Wednesday 25 February 2005.

further reading

Bob Drogin, Iraq War May Incite Terror, CIA Study Says, Los Angeles Times, 14 January 2005

Peggy Faw Gish, Iraq: A Journey of Hope and Peace, Herald Press, 2004

Seymour M Hersh, Chain of Command: From 9/11 to Abu Ghraib, Penguin/Allen Lane, 2004

Ewa Jasiewicz and Pennie Quinton, Protesters insist on trial as government and ‘plunder promoter’ drop charges, Wildfire, 25 November 2004

Andrew Kimbrell (ed), Fatal Harvest: The Tragedy of Industrial Agriculture, Island Press, 2002

Christian Parenti, The Freedom: Shadows and Hallucinations in Occupied Iraq, The New Press, 2004

Keith Parkins, The rape and pillage of Iraq, Indymedia Chicago, 5 December 2003
 http://chicago.indymedia.org/front.php3?article_id=34095&group=webcast

Keith Parkins, Sowing Seeds of Dissent, Indymedia UK, 6 September 2004
 http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/09/297391.html

Keith Parkins, Seeds of Dissent, September 2004
 http://www.heureka.clara.net/gaia/seeds.htm

Keith Parkins, Eyewitness Iraq, Indymedia UK, 26 November 2004
 http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/11/301915.html

Keith Parkins, Making a Killing: The Corporate Invasion of Iraq, Indymedia UK, 29 November 2004
 http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/11/302033.html

Keith Parkins, Occupation and Resistance in Iraq, Indymedia UK, 7 December 2004
 http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/12/302455.html

Keith Parkins, Future of Food, Indymedia UK, 24 January 2005
 http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2005/01/304228.html

Vandana Shiva, Stolen Harvest, South End Press, 1999

Jeremy Smith, Order 81, The Ecologist, February 2005

Keith Parkins
- Homepage: http://www.heureka.clara.net/gaia

Comments

Hide the following 5 comments

archaeological backup

27.01.2005 17:46

this from a 1961 pamphlet I bought today, "the Neolothic Revolution":
"Carbonized grains and clay impressions of spikelets of a form of Emmer were recovered at Jarmo, Iraq, dating from the later half of the pre-pottery Neolithic period, about 6,ooo BC. The wheat grains are nearer to the wild T.dicocoides than to true cultivated Emmer and evidently represent an early stage in the evolution of the crop. The Jarmo material shows considerable variation, whereas the cultivated Emmer of other localities and later periods, having been subjected to longer selection, is comparatively uniform" [...] "The earliest cultivated barley, known from Jarmo, is two-row: it is very like the wild H. spontaneum, differing from it only in the bigger grains and much tougher axis."

So there you go, we've known for 40 years and more that Iraq was the place where grain and barley (as in, bread and beer) were first created by hybridising different strains... no service to humanity there then.

anarchoteapot


would you care

27.01.2005 23:08

publish order 81 in full so we can make our own minds up?

sceptic


Order 81

28.01.2005 11:23

The order can be found at  http://www.iraqcoalition.org/regulations/#Orders

I would like to know more about this mass lobbying event. Who is organising it? What is the aim of it?

I'd also like to plug another Seedy Sunday event, in Machynlleth Community Hall, on Sun. 13th Feb. 11-3 with stalls, speakers from various organisations such as Corporate Watch and Vida Verde, a kids' space, refreshments etc.

Beansprout


Thank you, Dr Blimfield

28.01.2005 14:05

Your grace and tact is noted.

I don't see how the order relates to the article. The order appears to relate to 'New Plant Varieties'. If 97% of the farmers save their seeds, then they have no problem. These are not new varieties. Indeed, this sort of protection is needed by plant breeders worldwide.

Nothing in the order tells farmers what to grow. If 97% are saving their seed, they won't have to buy more. And no one is forcing them to buy patented seed.

"Order 81, protects plant patents, intellectual property rights. That is it will protect the rights of US corporations, but not the rights of Iraqi farmers who have been selecting seeds for generations."

I don't follow this. Aren't Iraqis capable of plant breeding? If they are, shouldn't their work be protected? The Iraqi farmers who have been selecting for generations have no problems either, since these are not new varieties and don't come under the Order.

"US corporations will license seeds to farmers.
50% of the wheat grown will be a variety used for pasta. Pasta? Iraqis don't eat pasta. Either it is for export, or the US troops are in for a very long occupation."

Anyone can licence seeds - Americans, Russians, British, Iraqi. Where do you get the 50% figure from? Farmers can buy what they want - the Order says nothing about that.

"The global food system is in crisis and facing meltdown. Agribusiness has been an unmitigated disaster."

Not true. There is more food being produced per head in the developed world than ever before.

From a report:
"USDA's January 24 Export Sales Report answered any lingering doubts about the Chinese wheat purchases, as total accumulated exports for the marketing year officially topped two million metric tons. When the Chinese started to buy U.S. wheat, some cynics questioned whether they would actually ship. Well, they did. Even the 376 thousand metric tons of U.S. soft white wheat. This brings China's U.S. wheat import totals to 3.2 MMT over the last 12 months.

Take a look at U.S. wheat exports to the Philippines, which are up 48 percent from this same time last year. In fact, total marketing year-to-date wheat sales already surpass last year's total marketing year (MY) sales. As of January 20, buyers in the Philippines have purchased 1.5 MMT of U.S. wheat, compared to total MY sales of 1.14 MMT in 2003/04. This is especially good news for hard red spring wheat producers, as HRS sales are almost double last year at this time.

In the western hemisphere, Mexico is the leading U.S. wheat customer, with 2.14 MMT in purchases so far, just slightly behind their buying pace last year. The fascinating numbers to watch, though, are for second place honors. As of January 20, only the recent shifts to delivery in 2005/06 from this marketing year put Cuba in 4th place behind Peru and Colombia. Cuba has purchased 546.7 TMT of U.S. wheat for delivery in 2004/05, with another 75 TMT on the books for shipment after May 30. Peru (at 600.4 TMT) is currently in second place for this marketing year, with Colombia (595 TMT) just a smidgen behind.

There is a big disappointment in western hemisphere sales, with Brazil buying just 61.7 TMT, down 87 percent from this time last year. On the other hand, Guatemalan purchases are up 43 percent, 297.5 TMT compared to 208 TMT last year."

Does this sound like an unmitigated disaster?

sceptic