400 peasants, clowns, and reapers liberate Belgian GM potato field

The “bat­tle of the pota­to” field in Wet­terem, near Ghent, Bel­gium, was a resound­ing vic­to­ry for anti-GM activists on Sun­day (29 May) as mem­bers of a crowd of around 400 peo­ple broke through police lines and barbed wire fences to destroy an exper­i­men­tal Genet­i­cal­ly Mod­i­fied pota­to crop.

The “bat­tle of the pota­to” field in Wet­terem, near Ghent, Bel­gium, was a resound­ing vic­to­ry for anti-GM activists on Sun­day (29 May) as mem­bers of a crowd of around 400 peo­ple broke through police lines and barbed wire fences to destroy an exper­i­men­tal Genet­i­cal­ly Mod­i­fied pota­to crop.

Genet­ic mod­i­fi­ca­tion of food crops is cur­rent­ly banned in the French-speak­ing Wal­lo­nia region of Bel­gium, and in the Brus­sels area, but the region­al gov­ern­ment of Flan­ders had giv­en the go-ahead for this tri­al plant­i­ng. Peo­ple from across Bel­gium and fur­ther afield, includ­ing many “faucheurs volon­taires” (vol­un­teer reapers) from the estab­lished French anti-GM farm­ing move­ment, came togeth­er under the ban­ner of the “Field Lib­er­a­tion Move­ment” to put the exper­i­ment to an end.

The day start­ed with set­ting up of a farmer’s mar­ket and com­mu­nal kitchen in a sym­pa­thet­ic field across the motor­way from the tar­get site. There were brief­in­gs, dis­cus­sions, infos­talls, and some inter­ac­tion with mem­bers of a “Save Our Sci­ence” counter demo by GM sup­port­ers, who came to argue their case that only more agribusi­ness super­crops can save the hun­gry of the world from crises of pover­ty and mal­nu­tri­tion. At 2pm the crowd start­ed mov­ing, led by a big inter­na­tion­al sam­ba band, across the motor­way foot­bridge to the field of des­tiny on the oth­er side. The organ­is­ers had called for “non-vio­lence” and not to pro­voke the cops, and the crowd was colour­ful, noisy, with small chil­dren and grown-up clowns in abun­dance. Tru­ly Lud­dite in spir­it (in all pos­i­tive sense of that maligned term) it had the flavour of a peas­ants’ revolt con­fronting the high-tech forces of empire. Around 50 Flem­ish robo­cops wait­ed, batons in hand, sur­round­ing the field (only about the size of a bas­ket­ball court), which was also ringed by stur­dy fences topped with barbed wire, cam­eras and motion sen­sors.

As the sun broke through the clouds at 3pm a siren sound­ed and the action was under­way. About half the crowd hopped the first low fence into the inter­ven­ing mead­ow and ran towards the exper­i­men­tal enclo­sure. It was soon clear that the police were out­num­bered, with many gaps in their lines through which pro­test­ers swarmed. (A major local foot­ball match may cer­tain­ly have helped the pro­tes­tors here.) The fenc­ing was tough and attempts to pull it down with ropes proved unsuc­cess­ful. But it was­n’t high enough to keep out climbers who car­ried strips of car­pet to get over the barbed wire. Once inside the com­pound the secu­ri­ty mea­sures then worked to the reapers’ advan­tage as the cops could only clam­ber after them, too late to stop pota­toes fly­ing every­where. Organ­ic seed­ing pota­toes were hurled by oth­ers from out­side the fence to replace the mod­i­fied strain.

There were around 15 arrests, all those who had made it inside the com­pound were stuck and worthi­ly sac­ri­ficed them­selves to the law in the best paci­fistic tra­di­tion. The police then had to dig a tun­nel under the fence to get them out again, and they were imme­di­ate­ly released after giv­ing ID details. It is not clear yet what charges will be brought, but the con­sor­tium behind the field, which includes the uni­ver­si­ty of Ghent, threat­ens to sue for dam­ages. There were quite a few injuries includ­ing hos­pi­tal­i­sa­tions from barbed wire cuts and trun­cheon blows.

To quote from the Field Lib­er­a­tion Move­men­t’s press release: “To sum up, the day of action was very suc­cess­ful. This action points out three paths to fol­low: the “peas­ant mar­ket” offered a plat­form for farm­ers with a real alter­na­tive, the demon­stra­tion gave the pub­lic the occa­sion to show sol­i­dar­i­ty with this cam­paign, and the action of civ­il dis­obe­di­ence effec­tive­ly lib­er­at­ed a pub­lic space. The debate is now open. From today, biotech­nol­o­gy has to demon­strate that its research is in the ser­vice of an agri­cul­tur­al mod­el which is sus­tain­able, eco­log­i­cal, and just.”

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