FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November
20, 2009
Contact:
Kathy
Ozer, National Family Farm Coalition
kozer@nffc.net, cell: 202.421.4544
Heather
Pilatic, Pesticide Action Network
heather@panna.org, cell: 415.694.8596
Patrick
Woodall, Food & Water Watch
pwoodall@fwwatch.org, 202.683.2487
Groups Deliver the Concerns of 90,000+ Citizens to
Senate on Nomination of Former Pesticide Industry Lobbyist
Siddiqui would represent industry, not best
interests of the American people
Washington, DC – A broad
coalition of groups delivered a petition
today to the White House and Senate leaders opposing the nomination of Islam
Siddiqui for Chief Agriculture Negotiator with the U.S. Trade Representative’s
office. More than 77,000 people
signed the petition calling for President Obama to remove Siddiqui’s name from consideration;
another 14,000 people emailed their Senators directly; and over 80
organizations sent a letter to the Senate Finance Committee. Siddiqui, a former
lobbyist for the pesticide industry, is one of a string of recent nominations who
is raising concerns among the ad hoc coalition, which includes sustainable
agriculture, family farm, farmworker, environmental, anti-hunger and trade
groups.
The Senate Finance
Committee had been scheduled to consider Siddiqui’s nomination today but was
postponed. If favorably reported
from the Committee, the Senate is expected to vote in the next few days.
Siddiqui was a lobbyist
for the pesticide industry association, CropLife America, between 2001 and
2003. Since then, he has held the position of Vice President for Science and
Regulatory Affairs with CropLife, during which time the association actively
lobbied the Bush Administration in favor of human – including child – testing of
pesticides. CropLife has also been a driving force behind weakening the U.S.
position on the Stockholm Convention, an effort to regulate the use of toxic
Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) including DDT, PCBs and dioxins.
In responding to questions asked by Senate Finance
Committee members, Siddiqui has promised to recuse himself from matters
pertaining to his current employer, CropLife America, should he be confirmed.
Kathryn Gilje, Executive Director of Pesticide Action Network, noted that an
ethics pledge misses the mark, “Siddiqui cannot recuse himself from a narrow
and short-sighted view of agriculture. He believes that chemical-intensive and
genetically modified agriculture is what the
world needs to feed itself when all the best independent science tells us that
this is simply not the case.”
Siddiqui’s nomination
comes at a moment of heated global debate about the best way to feed the world’s
1 billion hungry people. Companies like Monsanto, which CropLife represents,
claim that genetically-engineered seeds will boost yields. However, decades of
scientific research show that those promises have yet to materialize, while
international experts involved in the International Assessment Agricultural
Science and Technology for Development (IAASTD) study warn against genetic
engineering as a solution to world hunger.
Dena Hoff, a Montana farmer and vice-president of
the National Family Farm Coalition, said, “This November 30th marks
the tenth anniversary of the World Trade Organization (WTO) meetings in
Seattle. We face a deepening food crisis, water crisis, climate crisis, all of
which have been exacerbated by our trade agreements and the World Trade
Organization continuing to push failed chemical-intensive and biotech
solutions. We believe the United States can do better than nominating a former
pesticide lobbyist to this key position.”
"On the campaign trail
Barack Obama promised that he would end business as usual in Washington; Siddiqui's
nomination is a fundamental violation of that campaign pledge,” commented Dave
Murphy, director of Food Democracy Now! “Rather than extending the Clinton- and
Bush-era legacies of promoting ‘free’ trade and GMO devotees, President Obama should
nominate leaders who have a new vision for agriculture that is both
economically and environmentally sustainable."
To view the petition to
President Obama protesting the nominations of Siddiqui and Roger Beachy, visit: http://action.panna.org/t/5185/petition.jsp?petition_KEY=2150
The groups co-hosting the
petition: Pesticide Action Network,
National Family Farm Coalition, Food & Water Watch, The Farmworker
Association of Florida, Institute for Agriculture & Trade Policy, Food
Democracy Now!, Greenpeace, Center for Food Safety, Organic Consumers
Association, Credo, Center for Biological Diversity, Farm & Ranch Freedom
Alliance.
###
Food
& Water Watch is a non-profit organization working with grassroots
organizations around the world to create an economically and environmentally
viable future. Through research, public and policymaker education, media, and
lobbying, we advocate policies that guarantee safe, wholesome food produced in
a humane and sustainable manner and public, rather than private, control of
water resources including oceans, rivers, and groundwater. For more
information, visit www.foodandwaterwatch.org.
National Family Farm
Coalition (NFFC),
founded in 1986, unites and strengthens the voices and actions of its diverse
grassroots members to demand viable livelihoods for family farmers, safe and
healthy food for everyone, and economically and environmentally sound rural
communities. For more information visit www.nffc.net.
Pesticide
Action Network (PAN) promotes the elimination of highly hazardous
pesticides and offers solutions that protect people and the environment. PAN
North America is one of five independent regional centers of PAN International,
a worldwide network of more than 600 organizations in 90 countries. For more
than 25 years PAN has fought for environmental justice, sustainable agriculture
and food sovereignty. For more information visit www.panna.org.
Available
for interviews:
Kathryn Gilje, Executive Director, Pesticide Action
Network, Kathryn@panna.org, (415)
235-9437
Dena Hoff, Montana farmer & NFFC Vice-President, Chair
of Trade Task Force
(406) 939-1839 and Kathy Ozer, NFFC Executive Director
(202) 543-5675
Andrew Kimbrell, Executive Director, Center for Food Safety, Kimbrell@icta.org, (202) 547-9359
Tirso Moreno, The Farmworker Association of Florida,
(407) 810-3330
Dave Murphy, Director, Food Democracy Now!, (917) 968 –
7369, dave@fooddemocracynow.org

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