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Action Alert: Madagascar: Daewoo's Rainforest Land Grab in Nature's Paradise

The island of Madagascar is a veritable Noah's Ark of biodiversity, and this natural wealth is the country's primary treasure and opportunity for future ecologically sustainable development. Despite a recent revolution over the matter, the Korean company Daewoo Logistics continues to pursue plans to lease half the agricultural land in Madagascar for 99 years, industrially producing maize and palm oil on 1.3 million hectares that are now biodiversity rich rainforests and gardens. There already exists a severe food crisis nationally and local peoples, who are soon to be dispossessed from their land, are protesting, causing a major government crisis. Tell Daewoo the people of Madagascar have spoken -- and to shove off and leave Madagascar's rainforests, peoples and land alone.

By Rainforest Portal, a project of Ecological Internet - June 19, 2009

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NOTE: This is a protest, not a petition, sending emails to many real decision makers on matters vital to the Earth.

Madagascar's lemurs, rainforests and people threatened
Caption: Despite a revolution they caused, Daewoo still has not gotten the message they are not welcome. (link)

South Korean Daewoo Group continues with plans to lease for 99 years up to 1.3 million hectares (3.2 million acres) of Madagascar's land, much of it biodiversity rich rainforests and species rich local gardens. This is but one, albeit large, recent example of over-developed, over-populated, and land and water scarce Asian and Middle Eastern nations embarking upon global land grabs eerily reminiscent of past Western colonial practices. This global "land grab" by foreign governments and companies is a result of last year's food crisis and a shortage of arable land and water. In order to produce food and agrofuels necessary for a highly consumptive lifestyle, many developed and emerging countries are increasingly willing to threaten local and global human rights, rainforest and other natural ecosystems, and regional and global ecological sustainability.

Daewoo's land grabs direly threatens Madagascar's marvelously rich and biodiverse rainforests, of which only about 10% remain fully intact and standing.  Given millions of years of continental separation, magnificently unique biodiversity has involved, including about 100 species of lemurs.  Madagascar's remaining intact old forests and species rich mosaic of small agriculture are to be turned into toxic, oil palm and corn monocultures. Due to the political power struggle and overthrow of the government resulting from the project's secretive negotiation, loggers and animal traders have been violating even protected areas.  Daewoo Logistics refuses to accept responsibility for their land grab upon political stability and integrity of protected areas.

The vast majority of Malagasy people live in extreme poverty, malnutrition and even starvation. Madagascar is one of the poorest countries in the world. Two-thirds of the population lives below the poverty line, one third are malnourished and more than half a million people depend upon food supplies from the international community.  Daewoo's plans for large scale agro-industrial agriculture for export upon existing local gardens would dramatically exacerbate the situation. Dependence on food imports would continue to grow, food prices would rise and the nutritional situation of people worsen.

Actions by Daewoo Logistics and the Government of Madagascar strongly violate the customary lands and rights of the people who live there. The population living on the land to be leased by the project were neither informed nor questioned. The people need the land for food production and to generate income. Daewoo enjoys backing from the South Korean government, President Lee Myung-bak, who last year announced that Korea requires land abroad to maintain a stable long-term food supply. After months of sometimes violent protests in which dozens of people died, earlier this year the President of the Republic of Madagascar was removed from office. However defying all pronouncements of his successor, Daewoo continues to surreptitiously hold some 218,000 hectares of appropriated land.

Support our protest with a letter to Ahn Yong Nam, president and CEO of Daewoo Logistics Corp. Urge Daewoo to bring clarity and transparency to the public about the announced contract with the Madagascan government, and their contents and conditions. Make it clear that the biodiversity on the island needs the remaining natural areas to survive, the people of the country their land for food, other urgently needed commodities, and to ecologically sustainably produce income based upon standing forests.

  •   | Discuss Alert



Sample Email Sent


Please drop Daewoo's plans to develop customary land in Madagascar


Dear Mr. Ahn Yong Nam,

I am deeply concerned with the your company's ongoing
proposed land project in Madagascar. Despite your secretive
business practices having already contributed to a
revolutionary change of government, I understand Daewoo
Logistics persists in wanting to lease up to 1.3 million
hectares of land, much of it biodiversity rich rainforests,
in Madagascar for 99 years. The change of government has
cleared indicated you are not welcome to lease land in the
country.

It is totally inappropriate to use half of the arable land
of the island for the cultivation of maize and palm oil for
export. The vast majority of Malagasy people live in
extreme poverty, malnutrition and even starvation. Daewoo's
plans for large scale agro-industrial agriculture for
export would exacerbate this dramatic situation. Dependence
on food imports will continue to rise, food prices will
rise, and the nutritional situation of people worsen.

The actions of Daewoo Logistics and the Government of
Madagascar strongly violates the customary lands and rights
of the people who live there. The population living on the
land to be leased by the project was neither informed nor
questioned. The people need the land for food production
and to generate income.

Further, the project means serious dangers for the unique
natural treasures of the island. The extremely endangered
forests, other natural ecosystems and important diverse
agro-ecological systems of Madagascar would be cleared by
the project. The agro-industrial monocultures with corn and
oil palms planned by Daewoo would destroy the species rich
mosaic of small agriculture. The peasants who will lose
their land through the project will occupy land in other
areas, including the last 10% of dwindling rainforests.
This is not compatible with a sustainable development of
the island.

I ask you to promptly publicly announce whether there does
in fact already exist a land lease contract with the
Madagascan government, its content and conditions. It is
alleged that Daewoo Logistics has already acquired 218,000
hectares of land in different regions of the country. Can
you please confirm whether indeed this is the case?

I strongly urge you to immediately resign from the contract
to lease land, and to remove yourself from all other land
seizures and agricultural projects in Madagascar. The
biodiversity on the island needs the remaining natural
areas to survive, the people of the country their land for
food, other urgently needed commodities, and to produce
sustainably produce income based upon standing forests.
Daewoo is not welcome in Madagascar.

Yours sincerely,


   Earth Action Network Protest Participants

    

           



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