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CIVIL SOCIETY ON EU-INDONESIA COMPREHENSIVE ECONOMIC PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT (CEPA)

July 1, 2022
in Petition
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TO :

  • Mr. Joko Widodo,
    President of the Republic of Indonesia.
  • Mr. Prof. Dr. Pratikno,
    Minister of State Secretary of the Republic of Indonesia
  • Mr. Dr. H. Zulkifli Hasan, S.E., M.M
    Minister of Trade of The Republic of Indonesia
  • Ms. Retno L.P. Marsudi
    Minister of Foreign Affair of The Republic of Indonesia
  • Mr. Dr H. Syahrul Yasin Limpo, S.H, M.H
    Minister of Agriculture of The Republic of Indonesia
  • Mr. Djatmiko Bris Witjaksono
    Director General of International Trade Negotiations, Ministry of Trade
  • Mr. Prof (Riset) Dr. Ir. Erizal Jamal, M.Si
    Head of Center for Plant Variety Protection and Agricultural Licensing Ministry of Agricultur

RE :
EU-Indonesia CEPA (Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement) Must Not Include Obligation to Join or Implement UPOV 1991

The undersigned organizations work with and for farmers and on agricultural issues in many different countries. We are aware that Europe Union and Indonesia are negotiating FTA (free trade agreement) or called as CEPA (comprehensive economic partnership agreement). In this regard, we call on the Indonesian government to reject the European Union’s proposal that requires Indonesia to join or implement UPOV 1991 or impose any other obligation,
and/or limitation in accordance to UPOV 1991.

Agriculture is one of the crucial importances to Indonesia’s economy. It is the second biggest source of employment, in particular in the country’s rural areas, with around 33% of Indonesia’s labor force being employed in the agricultural sector. It accounts for 14% of GDP. 93% percent of Indonesia’s total number of farmers is small family farms (i.e. small-holder farmers). 93% of these farmers have an average land holding of 0.6 hectares.(i Seeds are one of the most basic things for farmers and the agricultural sector. In Indonesia most of the seed is supplied by diverse farmer seed systems. The main pillar of this system is the
farmer’s right to save, use, exchange, and sell farms save seeds as well as the freedom to breed and sell their breeding seeds.

However, the 1991 Act of the UPOV Convention (UPOV 91) deprives farmers of the right to exchange and sell protected seeds or propagating material. Even saving seeds and replanting on their own fields is prohibited for most plant species and restricted for others. Therefore, UPOV 91 not only jeopardizes the right to food and food sovereignty, but is also a threat to agrobiodiversity.

The UPOV system provides a greatly rigid legal framework and is not suitable for small holders farmers especially in developing countries. This system was developed in the 60s for seed production modalities in developed countries, especially in Europe. Indonesia and other developing countries have never participated in UPOV negotiations. Therefore, many independent experts recommend that developing countries should not join or implement the UPOV system in their country.(ii The diversity of varieties saved in gene banks and cultivated in fields and gardens across the world, which is an indispensable resource for breeding new crops, relies on functioning farmers seed systems. If we destroy these systems, we harm humanity as a whole. The dangers of inappropriate plant variety protection laws have been highlighted by many different reports and studies in recent years. The main arguments are also
summarised in a briefing paper accompanying this open letter.

The Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, Michael Fakhri, in its last report “Seeds, right to life and farmers’ rights” where he recommends that UN “ Member States should consider: Not pressuring other Member States to join the International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants in any way. Being a party to that Convention should no longer be required as part of bilateral or regional agreements.(iii Member States are strongly encouraged to remove such requirements from current agreements;” For the reasons aforementioned, we demand the Indonesian government to reject the
European Union’s proposal in the EU-Indonesia CEPA that requires becoming a member of UPOV 91 and/or Implement UPOV 1991” Finally, we would like to recall Indonesia’s support for the “Declaration on the rights of farmers and people working in rural areas” adopted by the Human Rights Council and
the United Nations General Assembly which requires States to “take steps to respect, protect and fulfill the Rights of Farmers and Other People Working in Rural Areas”. The implementation of this Declaration requires Indonesia to have full policy space in implementing the relevant measures.

Therefore, in the negotiations for the CEPA of Indonesia and the European Union, no one should influence and limit this freedom. Indonesia must have a policy space to protect farmers’ seed systems that are suitable for their agricultural systems, protect farmers’ local plant genetic resources, and protect the public interest and enable the government to take steps in implementing the Declaration on the Rights of Farmers and people working in the rural areas.

Signatories,

  • INDONESIA
    Aliansi Petani Indonesia (API)
    Bina Desa
    BITRA Indonesia
    ELSAKA
    FIAN Indonesia
    FIELD Indonesia (YDBN)
    FLIGHT: Protecting Indonesia’s Birds
    FSBKU
    Indonesia for Global Justice (IGJ)
    Indonesian Human Rights Committee for Social
    Justice (IHCS)
    JAMTANI
    Jaringan Advokasi Tambang Sulawesi Tengah
    JPIC Kalimantan
    Kaliptra Andalas
    Koalisi Rakyat untuk Kedaulatan Pangan
    Komite Nasional Pertanian Keluarga (KNPK)
    Komodo Indonesia Lestari Foundation (Yakines)
    KONPHALINDO
    Konfederasi Pergerakan Rakyat Indonesia (KPRI)
    Perkumpulan INISIATIF
    Perkumpulan Kediri Bersama Rakyat (KIBAR)
    Samawa Islam Transformatif
    Save Our Borneo
    Serikat Petani Indonesia
    Setara Jambi
    WALHI Jambi
    WALHI South Sulawesi
    Yayasan CAPPA Keadilan Ekologi
    Yayasan Pusaka Bentala Rakyat
    Yayasan Tananua Flores
  • EUROPE
    11.11.11 – Belgium
    Amis de la Terre – France
    ARCHE NOAH – Austria
    Both ENDS – Netherlands
    Confédération Paysanne – France
    Fastenaktion – Switzerland
    FIAN Deutschland – Germany
    FIAN Switzerland – Switzerland
    FNV – Netherlands
    Fruchtwechsel e. V. – Germany
    Handelskampanjen – Norway
    Hilfswerk der evangelischen Kirche der Schweiz (HEKS) – Switzerland
    Li Mestère ASBL – Belgium
    MISEREOR – Germany
    Naturefriends – Greece
    NOAH – Denmark
    Platform Aarde Boer Consument – Netherlands
    Rettet den Regenwald e.V. – Germany
    SEEDS ACTION NETWORK – Germany
    Sesam – Sweden
  • SolidariteitsNetwerk BuurtTuinen – Netherlands
    Stiftung Asienhaus – Germany
    StoereVrouwen – Netherlands
    SWISSAID – Switzerland
    Verein zur Erhaltung der Nutzpflanzenvielfalt e.V. (VEN) – Germany
    Vitale Rassen – Belgium
    Watch Indonesia! e.V. – German
  • INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION
    APBREBES
    CAFOD
    CIDSE
    FIAN International
    GRAIN
    Rettet den Regenwald
  • SOUTHEAST ASIA REGIONAL INITIATIVES FOR
    COMMUNITY EMPOWERMENT

    Third World Network
    Transnational Institute
    Umbrella Association for cultivated plants and livestock
    diversity conservation in German speaking countries
  • AFRICA
    AbibiNsroma Foundation – Ghana
    African Centre for Biodiversity – South Africa
    AVRD International – Tchad
    Commons for EcoJustice – Malawi
    MELCA-Ethiopia – Ethiopia
    TABIO – Tanzania
  • LATIN AND NORTH AMERICA
    A Growing Culture – USA
    Acción Ecológica – Ecuador
    Asociación Nacional para el Fomento de la
    Agricultura Ecológica (ANAFAE) – Honduras
    Aula Verde AC – Mexico
    Grassroots International – United States
    Grupo Semillas – Colombia
    National Farmers Union – Canada
    Red de Coordinación en Biodiversidad – Costa Rica
    Trade Justice Network – Canada
    UDAPT – Ecuador
  • ASIA
    BARCIK – Bangladesh
    Consumers’ Association of Penang – Malaysia|
    Office INYAKU – Japan
    Pakistan Fisherfolk Forum – Pakistan
    Participatory Research & Action Network (PRAAN) Bangladesh
    Sahabat Alam Malaysia (Friends of the Earth Malaysia) – Malaysia

END NOTE

  • i) http://www.fao.org/3/i8881en/I8881EN.pdf
  • ii) The UPOV Convention, Farmers’ Rights and Human Rights – An integrated assessment of potentially conflicting legal frameworks” diterbitkan oleh Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) atas nama the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development” (Juni 2015) tersedia di https://www.giz. de/fachexpertise/downloads/giz2015-en-upov-convention.pdf; UNDP (2008) “Towards a Balanced Sui Generis Plant Variety Regime”, bisa diunduh di http://www.undp. org/content/undp/en/home/librarypage/poverty- reduction/toward-a-balanced-sui-generis-plant-variety-regime.html; “Owning Seeds, Accessing Food – A human rights impact assessment of UPOV 1991 based on case studies in Kenya, Peru and the Philippines,” Oktober 2014. Tersedia di https://www.publiceye.ch/en/topics-background/ agriculture-and-biodiversity/seeds/owning-seeds-accessing-food/; Carlos M. Correa et al. (2015), « Plant Variety Protection in Developing Countries: A Tool for Designing a Sui Generis Plant Variety Protection System: An Alternative to UPOV 1991 », APBREBES, bisa diunduh di http://www.apbrebes.org/news/new-publication-plant-variety-pro tection-developing-countries-tool-designing-sui-generis- plant
  • iii) Michael Fakhri, “Seeds, right to life and farmers’ rights Report of the Special Rapporteur on the right to food”, 2022, ://documents-dds-y.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/ G21/397/86/PDF/G2139786.pdf?OpenElemen

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