Ecological agriculture is the way out of poverty
Compiled by Sarath Fernando
  MONLAR 
This  Sri Lanka National Report is based on the experiences of action and struggle in  Sri Lanka for about 20 years for a more logical, workable and people friendly  approach and strategy for economic improvement, reduction of poverty and hunger  and for social justice.
  Over  a hundred organizations of farmers, fishers, women, plantation workers and  industrial workers have joined and contributed to these activities. Today we  are able to present a very workable alternative approach to the economy and  development process in the country. It has succeeded in getting the Government  to accept some aspects of this strategy at least as election promises.  It is a strategy that is relevant to the  current world situation and a strategy that can be worked out to a considerable  degree, even without active and honest support of government.
  The main thesis
  In  order to face the current crisis of MDG failure to reduce hunger and poverty  new strategies have to be formulated and new planners and decision makers are  necessary. The failures of the present leaders of powerful countries and the  international institutions they have set up to find effective solutions to the  many crises that the world is facing shows that it is foolish to expect the  very creators of these crises to find solutions.
  Thus  it is necessary to think of new strategies and new planners and decision makers  to find effective solutions.
  In  finding solutions it is necessary to find ways in which the poor and hungry  people take over the tasks of overcoming hunger and poverty. Since they do not  have capital and since borrowed capital not be expected to support a process  that does not benefit capital such a strategy will have to depend on capital to  a minimum. Thus, free gifts of nature are utilized to the maximum
  In Sri Lanka’s  situation we have found that the most effective way of ending hunger and  poverty is by allowing nature to make its maximum contribution to this process.  Sri Lanka still has a very large  percentage of small farmers who are concerned primarily with producing their  food. Thus, they grow rice, main food, vegetables, pulses, yams and potatoes  etc.
  In  1996 the World Bank guided the government of Sri Lanka to adopt policies that  would push these people out of their land and agriculture, getting them to  migrate into cities and find non-farm employment.: (Ref: Non Plantation Sector  Policy alternatives: WB report 1996). This however, has not worked in Sri Lanka and still large numbers of people live in  rural areas. Youth in Sri Lanka have waged three armed rebellion that killed  around 10,000 in 1971, about 60,000 in 1988 -90 (UN Committee on involuntary  disappearances visiting Sri Lanka in 1991) and over several hundred thousand in  the northern war that lasted for 30 years Trying to make the country attractive  to foreign investment over the last 36 years has failed and only cost the  country a tremendous increase in foreign debt. More recently the governments  have declared various programmes for rural small farmers’ agricultural  improvement. Programmes such as "Divineguma" (livelihood improvement),  "Gamaneguma" (improvement of village), "Gemi Diriya" (courage of villagers, "Api  Wawamu" "Rata Nagamu" (let grow and Build the Nation) have all being saying  about utilizing the possibilities of rural small holders to grow their own  food. However, these programmes have been influenced by agro chemical companies  for their interests and thus the programs are not carried out with a right  vision and approach.  Governments still  continue in the same direction of improving massive infrastructure, building  express highways, international airports and harbors, tourist zones etc which  have failed to achieve the declared objective of expanding exports attracting  foreign investment, achieving faster economic growth, expecting it to trickle  down and reduce poverty. This is just to be able to get more and more foreign  loans. The burdens of these debts are transferred to the poor while the rich  and investors get very large tax holidays.
  Experiences of farmers in Sri Lanka
  Experiences  of farmer organizations and people’s organizations over the last 15 to 2 years  show that ecological agriculture is a very effective way of overcoming hunger  and poverty and of reducing ill health, and ecological destruction caused by  conventional chemical farming. Further this has become very expensive since all  chemical inputs are imported. Government has had to spend huge sums of money to  provide chemical fertilizer at subsidized prices (about a hundred billion is  spent annually on the fertilizer subsidy alone). It has now been found that  chemical agriculture leads to severe health problems and death. In Padaviya in  the North Central Province  around 20,000 people have died of a mysterious kidney disease proved to be  caused by arsenic or Cadmium poisoning due to chemical agricultural inputs. In  the North Central Province  the people affected by this disease is over a hundred thousand. It is spreading  to other areas too since this practice is island wide. Cancers, diabetes, high  blood pressure and many other diseases are caused by these.
  Thus,  it is definitely necessary and quite possible to transform chemical input  dependent agriculture in Sri Lanka  into a much more beneficial form of ecological agriculture.
  In  doing this it is necessary to give an emphasis to the necessary transformation  in the hill country, which is almost entirely covered by tea grown as a  monoculture plantation. There is a very important need to attend to in the hill  country agriculture and land use.
  When  the British started tea plantations they brought cheap labour from India. Over a million people were thus brought and  kept under conditions of semi slavery. They were kept under miserable  conditions, very low conditions of housing, health, education etc. In 1947,  they were deprived of citizenship since it was feared that they would vote for  the left parties. When Sri Lanka got  independence these workers did not get any independence and they are even today  kept under the same conditions. Plantations today are a dying industry, the  soil has got completely eroded and less productive. Therefore, people’s  organizations demand that these plantation people should be given land  ownership and they should be assisted and guided to do ecological agriculture. We  have found that about 40 % of plantation youth have got some education now and  are unemployed. They do not want to be employed as plantation labour under the  present degrading conditions. Transforming the hill country into an  ecologically sound form of agriculture, with the highest elevations reforested  and rest of the land convered into diversified agriculture growing fruits,  vegetables, timber and also animal husbandry can best be done by the plantation  people themselves.
  In  the experience of rural farmer organizations such ecological agriculture can be  tremendously productive and extremely beneficial. Overcoming the poisoning of  the hill country with chemical farming is essential since the hill country is  the major catchment area. Heaviest rainfall is in the hill country and this  rainfall is carried to the plains right round by around 200 rivers. So storage  of water in the hill country by improving the forest cover and overcoming  erosion is essential for the whole country. Ecological agriculture can also provide  nourishing and diversified food to the people, and plantation people are the  most undernourished section of the population.
  This  transformation needs to be done in all other parts of the country.
The  essential elements of ecological agriculture are:
- Protection and improvement of top soil be preventing erosion (building ridges and mulching)
- Making maximum use of sunlight by growing a variety of trees, growing to different canopies,
- Complete recycling of all organic matter and utilizing animal waste for increasing microbial activity for soil fertility improvement
- Avoiding the use of chemical pesticides (allowing insects to do their job),weedicides ( stopping the killing of microbes, allowing them to o their task of soil fertility improvement ) and avoiding the use of chemical fertilizer (allowing the enhancement of microbial activity and avoiding soil and water poisoning)
- Maximum diversity of plants to reduce pest losses and improve bio diversity
- Improving forest cover to reduce erosion and get other benefits.
These  principles can be applied in all parts of the country. Farmer organizations and  their networks have begun to do this over the last 10 – 15 years and there are  about a thousand villages where the benefits and methods can be demonstrated.
  How this can be further propagated
  It  is useful if all people’s organizations and NGOs understand and engage  themselves in this strategy. It is very important to initiate dialogue with all  political parties, development organizations, scientists and scholars and all  those involved in development dialogue about the effectiveness and urgency of  this strategy.
  Olivier  De Schutter, the UN special rapporteur on right to food presented a paper  several months ago that it is possible to overcome hunger by adopting  ecological agriculture. Using examples of many countries, particularly in  Africa when environmental conditions are difficult, that food production can be  doubled within 3 to 10 years adopting ecological agriculture.
  IAASTED  (International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology  for Development) a very high level research done by 400 scientists, working  for 4 years, studying many countries of the world said that there are very  strong weaknesses in agriculture so far. They were that it was not sufficiently  socially concerned and it was not environmentally concerned. These need to be  corrected. This shows that the global trend has begun to change.
  Youth
  We  suggest that in Sri Lanka, a country that has failed miserably to treat its  youth justly and rationally should adopt a strategy of reorienting the entire  field of youth education to help youth to develop ecological agriculture as a  way of building a new scientific and dignified profession. Around 300,000  students sit for the GCE advanced level exam and around 120,000 pass with  sufficient marks to enter universities. However universities absorb only less  than 20,000. So, around a 100,000 most intelligent and hard working youth are  stranded annually. This is the breeding ground for youth rebellion. This can be  overcome by giving then opportunities to become new professional and experts  playing a very useful role of transforming the country.
  We  have found that this can be done at very low cost. Using a small plot of land  of (say ¼ acre) it is possible to get an additional output of around Rs. 3,000  or 4,000 a month at practically no other cost of production. A youth instructor  who can be trained easily within a month in basic aspects of ecological home  gardening can attend to about 30 home gardens visiting each of them weekly. If  the beneficiary pays this instructor about Rs. 300 a month, he /she can get a  remuneration of around Rs. 10,000 a month which is equivalent to a graduates  staring salary. They can be provided higher education opportunities over the  weekends and be given a diploma after some time. Thus government can do this  with very little additional cost. The savings to the country in terms of  health, environmental improvement, water improvement and more important a  creative contribution from all people is possible.
  We  suggest that this process of transformation should be begun by people  themselves with initiation by people’s organizations. When this is sufficiently  built to a demonstrative scale people must begin to actively reject conventional  chemical agriculture and eating such unhealthy food. This should be done  ignoring Government, until they begin to accept this. We have to continue  lobbying all the time.

