Indian, Thai farmers fight US 'biopiracy'
By Danielle Knight
WASHINGTON - As part of a growing worldwide campaign against
''biopiracy'', a coalition of US and Indian groups are taking legal aim at
US companies who are selling US rice they have falsely labelled under the
unique names of Indian and Pakistani basmati rice and Thai jasmine rice.
The Washington-based International Center for Technology Assessment (ICTA)
and the Research Foundation for Science, Technology and Ecology (RFSTE),
based in New Delhi, want to stop US rice millers, producers and trade
associations from marketing low quality US aromatic rice under the terms
''basmati'' and ''jasmine'' in order to receive a premium price. ''The
current US policy of allowing virtually any aromatic rice to be labelled
basmati or jasmine is nothing short of criminal,'' says Andrew Kimbrell,
executive director of the Center for Food Safety, a project of ICTA. The
Texas company, RiceTec Inc, for example, sells US-grown ''Texmati'' rice
as ''American basmati'' and ''jasmati'' as ''American Jasmine''.
Both groups filed legal petitions this month with two US government
agencies to revise their laws to protect the jasmine and basmati rice
types grown in Asia. The petitions say current US regulations allow US
companies to deceive consumers and threaten the livelihoods of millions of
Indian and Pakistani farmers who grow basmati rice and Thai farmers who
grow jasmine rice. Current US rice standards allow companies to use the
terms ''basmati'' and ''jasmine'' as generic terms that can apply to rice
grown anywhere.
One petition, filed with the US Department of Agriculture, demands that it
amend its rice standards on ''aromatic'' rice to clarify that the term
''basmati'' can only be used for rice grown in India and Pakistan, and the
word ''jasmine'' grown in Thailand. ''Since American consumers and farmers
correctly believe that 'basmati' rice can only be produced in India and
Pakistan and 'jasmine' rice in Thailand, the use of the descriptors
'basmati' and 'jasmine' in current US rice standards is misleading,'' says
the petition. The groups' proposal would make those of the US consistent
with those of Saudi Arabia and the United Kingdom's Code of Practice for
Rice, says Kimbrell.
The other petition, filed with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), demands
the agency initiate a trade regulation to prevent US-grown rice from being
advertised or otherwise represented as ''basmati'' or ''jasmine''. The
groups are making their case under the FTC act which prohibits ''unfair or
deceptive acts of practices in or affecting commerce''.
Basmati rice is critical to the economies of India and Pakistan, says the
petition. Each year India sells approximately $300 million worth of
basmati rice. And it is counted among the nation's fastest growing
exports. In Thailand - dependent on its rice exports to alleviate its
economic downturn - jasmine fetches the steepest price among all Thai
rice. ''When American companies steal the very names and strains of our
indigenous rice, they threaten the lives of millions of farmers and their
families in India, Pakistan, and Thailand,'' says Vandana Shiva, executive
director of RFSTE.
The petitions do not address the disputes over rice breeding patents held
by RiceTec. The Indian government is currently contesting a patent held by
the company for a US hybrid rice that was crossed with traditional Indian
Basmati, which has been cultivated by farmers for centuries on the
foothills of the Himalayas - in Punjab, Haryana, and Uttar Pradesh.
The task of revoking a patent held by a US company is not impossible, but
it remains a daunting - and expensive - task. In 1997, the Indian
government's Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) scored a
victory when it succeeded in convincing the US Patent and Trademark Office
to revoke a patent granted to two US scientists on the use of turmeric
powder as a healing agent. It ruled that using the popular spice for
medicinal purposes was not a new ''invention'' but a millennial old Indian
practice. But the CSIR did not win its case just by claiming traditional
wisdom. It had to produce written documentation. It resorted to ancient
Sanskrit texts and a paper published in 1953 in the Journal of the Indian
Medical Association.
Thailand is worried that its famed jasmine is the next to be patented.
Thai legislators are working to protect the nation's fragrant rice under a
trademark before RiceTec or another foreign company acquires such
certification. While the Thai government originally accused RiceTec of
obtaining jasmine rice strains for its ''jasmati'' brand, the
Philippines-based International Rice Research Institute says the US brand
was developed from della, a variety that originated in Italy.
Just the brand name alone, however, has sparked demonstrations by farmers
in Thailand and India who fear their livelihoods will be compromised by
such US brands that mimic their reputed crops.
In 1998, hundreds of Thai rice farmers held a protest in front of the US
embassy in Bangkok. ''Selling other rice varieties or even Thai jasmine
rice grown in your country as 'jasmati' defames our farmers, destroys our
rights and deceives your own consumers,'' they said in a letter to the US
ambassador.
The government reportedly said that it was determining whether market
prospects had been damaged by the proliferation of varieties like
''jasmati''.