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A food system that kills The world is facing yet another pandemic. Once again, the official response from public authorities has come too late and bungled in cover-ups. And once again, the global meat industry is at the centre of the story, ramping up denials as the weight of evidence about its role grows. GRAIN JUST five years after the start of the H5N1 bird flu crisis, and after as many years of a global strategy against influenza pandemics coordinated by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE), the world is now reeling from a swine flu disaster. The global strategy has failed and needs to be replaced with a public health system that the public can trust. What
we know about the current pandemic is that it originated in Experts
have been warning for years that the rise of large-scale factory farms
in
Another
thing we know about the swine flu outbreak in After
countless efforts by the community to get the authorities to help -
efforts which led to the arrest of several community leaders and death
threats against people speaking out against the Smithfield operations
- local health officials finally decided to investigate in late 2008.
Tests revealed that more than 60% of the community of 3,000 people were
infected by a respiratory disease, but officials did not confirm what
the disease was. On 4 April 2009, the Mexican daily La Jornada published an article on the struggle of the community of La Gloria, with a photo in which a young boy is holding a placard at a demonstration with a picture of a pig crossed out and the words 'Danger: Carrolls Farm' written on it in Spanish.8 About influenza pandemics in general, we know that proximity of factory pig farms and factory poultry farms increases the risks of viral recombination and the emergence of new virulent flu strains. Pigs held near to chicken farms in Indonesia, for instance, are known to have high levels of infection from H5N1, the deadly variant of bird flu.9 Scientists from the NIH warn 'that increasing the numbers of swine facilities adjacent to avian facilities could further promote the evolution of the next pandemic'.10 While it has not been widely reported, the region around the community of La Gloria is also home to many large poultry farms. Recently, in September 2008, there was an outbreak of bird flu among poultry in the region. At the time, veterinary authorities assured the public that it was only a local incidence of a low-pathogenic strain affecting backyard birds. But we now know, thanks to a disclosure made by Marco Antonio Nez Lpez, the President of the Environmental Commission of the State of Veracruz, that there was also an avian flu outbreak on a factory farm about 50 kilometres from La Gloria owned by Mexico's largest poultry company, Granjas Bachoco, that was not revealed because of fears of what it might mean for Mexico's export markets.11 It should be noted that a common ingredient in industrial animal feed is 'poultry litter', which is a mixture of everything found on the floor of factory poultry farms: faecal matter, feathers, bedding, etc. Could
there be a more ideal situation for the emergence of a pandemic influenza
virus than a poor rural area full of factory farms owned by transnational
corporations who care nothing for the well-being of the local people?
The residents of La Gloria have tried for years to resist the
It
is not the first time and it will not be the last time that corporate
farms conceal disease outbreaks and put people's lives at risk. It is
the nature of their business. A couple of years ago in Romania, Smithfield
refused to let local authorities enter its pig farms after residents
complained of the stench coming from hundreds of pig corpses left rotting
for days at the farms. 'Our doctors have not had access to the American
[company's] farms to effect routine inspections,' said Csaba Daroczi,
assistant director at the Timisoara Hygiene and Veterinary Authority.
'Every time they tried, they were pushed away by the guards. In Indonesia, where people are still dying from bird flu and where many health experts believe the next pandemic virus will emerge, authorities can still not enter large corporate farms without the permission of the company.15 In Mexico, authorities deflected calls to investigate Granja Carroll and accused the residents of La Gloria of spreading infection because 'they use home remedies instead of going to the health centres to cure their flu.'16 Factory
farms are time-bombs for global disease epidemics. Yet, there are still
no programmes in place to deal with them, not even programmes of independent
disease surveillance. Nobody on high seems to care, and it's probably
no coincidence that these farms tend to be located amongst the poorest
communities, who suffer dearly to get the truth out. Worse still, so
much of our food supply now comes from this bloated system that the
main task of government food safety agencies now seems to be to calm
fears and keep people eating. In
the meantime, the pharmaceutical industry is making a killing from the
crisis. The
Clearly, the global system for dealing with health problems brought on by the transnational food industry is completely upside-down. Its surveillance system is a bust, frontline public health and veterinarian services are in a shambles and authority has been handed over to the private sector, which has every interest in maintaining the status quo. Meanwhile, people are told to keep indoors and to keep their fingers crossed for Tamiflu or a new vaccine that they may or may not get access to. This is not a tolerable situation; action for a sea change is needed, now. In
the specific case of the swine flu epidemic in At the international level, the expansion of factory farms has to stop and be put into reverse. They are the hotbeds for pandemics and will continue to be as long as they exist. It is probably pointless to call for a complete shift in the WHO-led global strategy, since the experience with bird flu demonstrates that neither WHO, nor the OIE, nor most governments are going to take a hard line on corporate farming. Once again, it is people who are going to have to take the lead and protect themselves. Across the world, there are thousands of communities fighting against factory farms. These communities are on the front lines of pandemic prevention. What we now need is to turn these local fights against factory farms into a global movement to abolish them. But
the swine flu disaster in GRAIN is a small international non-profit organisation that works to support small farmers and social movements in their struggles for community-controlled and biodiversity-based food systems. The above is reproduced from its website www.grain.org.
1
The pig industry in 2 Mary J. Gilchrist, Christina Greko, David B. Wallinga, George W. Beran, David G. Riley and Peter S. Thorne, 'The Potential Role of CAFOs in Infectious Disease Epidemics and Antibiotic Resistance,' Journal of Environmental Health Perspectives, 14 November 2006. 3 Bernice Wuethrich, 'Chasing the Fickle Swine Flu', Science, Vol. 299, 2003. 4 Pro-poor Livestock Policy Initiative, 'Industrial Livestock Production and Global Health Risks,' FAO, 2007: http://www.fao.org/ag/againfo/ programmes/en/pplpi/docarc/pb_hpaiindustrialrisks.html 5 CDC, 21 April 2009 / 58 (Dispatch);1-3: http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm58d0421a1.htm 6
Andrs T. Morales, 'Cerco sanitario en Perote, tras muerte en marzo
de beb por gripe porcina,' La Jornada, 28 April 2009: http://www.jornada.unam.mx/2009/04/28/?section=politica&article=012n2pol;
Tracy Wilkinson and Cecilia Snchez, ' 7 Dudley Althaus, 'World's queries have no answers,' Houston Chronicle, 27 April 2009. 8 Andrs Timoteo, 'Alerta epidemiolgica en Perote por brote de males respiratorios,' La Jornada, 4 April 2009. 9 David Cyranoski, 'Bird flu spreads among Java's pigs,' Nature 435, 26 May 2005. 10 Mary J. Gilchrist, Christina Greko, David B. Wallinga, George W. Beran, David G. Riley and Peter S. Thorne, 'The Potential Role of CAFOs in Infectious Disease Epidemics and Antibiotic Resistance,' Journal of Environmental Health Perspectives, 14 November 2006. 11 Piden cerco sanitario ante epidemia, SPI/ElGolfo.Info, 24 April 2009: http://www.elgolfo.info/web/lo-mas-nuevo/37017-piden-cerco-sanitario-ante-epidemia-.html 12
Tom Philpott first broadcast the possible connection between the
swine flu outbreak and the 13 Mirel Bran: 'Swine Plague: Romania Criticizes American Group's Attitude', Le Monde, 15 August 2007, translated by Leslie Thatcher (Truthout). 14 GRAIN, 'Viral times - The politics of emerging global animal diseases', Seedling, January 2008 15
See ' 16 'Afectados por extraa enfermedad, 60% de pobladores de La Gloria,' La Jornada, 27 April 2009: http://www.lajornadasanluis.com.mx/2009/04/27/pol15.php 17
'Is Smithfield on the market?', Farming 18 'Smaller drug firms gaining from swine flu,' Reuters, 27 April 2009: http://www.reuters.com/article/pressReleasesMolt/idUSTRE53Q5P620090427 *Third World Resurgence No. 227, July 2009, pp 12-14 |
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