EXCERPT: "Evidently, the Bush administration is behind this decision," said George Naylor, president of the Washington-based National Family Farm Coalition. "No one would think of fearing Jose's presence in this country except multinational corporations with a profit motive."
GM WATCH COMMENT: This is how the news of the French farmer Jose Bove being banned from entering the U.$. was received by CS Prakash's AgBioView: "And Now for Some Really Good News... Jose Bove Sent Packing by U.S."
It's interesting that the banning of people who challenge major corporations is considered "Really Good News", while the exclusion of those companies' suspect imports is considered an "Outrage!" that requires the intervention of the WTO to try and force through their entry.
"But Bove has been to prison for his actions", we can hear the likes of Prakash protest. Well, so too has Prakash's fellow GM propagandist, Dr Douglas Powell, and for far worse than tearing up GM crops, yet steps were specifically taken to get round Powell's criminal convictions in order to allow him to continue to enter the United States. (see Powell's profile)
http://www.gmwatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=257
Somehow we don't remember Prakash saying that that was an "Outrage!"
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Activists: U.S. violated freedoms by barring French farmer at JFK
VERENA DOBNIK
Associated Press, 9 February 2006 http://www.belleville.com/mld/belleville/news/state/13833001.htm
NEW YORK – Activists criticized the U.S. government on Thursday for stopping a French farmer – a key figure in the anti-globalization movement – from entering the country to voice his opposition to genetically engineered food.
Jose Bove, best known for ransacking a McDonald's restaurant in France, was detained at John F. Kennedy International Airport upon arrival for an international conference on globalization and labor organized by Cornell University. His supporters were furious.
"Evidently, the Bush administration is behind this decision," said George Naylor, president of the Washington-based National Family Farm Coalition. "No one would think of fearing Jose's presence in this country except multinational corporations with a profit motive."
Bove arrived in the United States under a visa waiver program that allows citizens of certain countries, including France, to travel here for tourism or business for up to 90 days without a visa.
Janet Rapaport, a New York spokeswoman for U.S. Customs and Border Protection, said Bove was refused admission on Wednesday for reasons she said she could not discuss.
In a telephone interview from his farm in southern France, Bove told The Associated Press that when he arrived at the airport U.S. officials "knew exactly who I was. And they told me, 'You have to get out.'"
He said he had visited the United States last year, speaking at Yale University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
"The fact that they don't want me to come in now is a new way for the Bush administration to build coalitions against us," the 52-year-old farmer said.
He noted that his trip on Wednesday coincided with a World Trade Organization ruling against European Union curbs on imports of genetically modified foods.
A key topic of the New York conference was "how people can fight (U.S. agriculture giant) Monsanto. This is an international struggle," Bove said. "The American government is fed up with this fight because such companies are losing a lot of money."
Monsanto, a St. Louis-based agriculture giant, produces genetically engineered corn, soybean and cotton seed for sale to farmers. The United States accounts for more than half of all biotech crops grown worldwide – mostly soybeans and corn.
U.S. Agriculture Secretary Mike Johanns said recently that agricultural biotechnology "provides tremendous benefits to farmers and rural communities."
Monsanto spokesman Chris Horner said farmers buy the company's seeds because "they provide real, tangible benefits – reduced costs, reduced pesticide use with insect-protected crops and more yield."
Bove had planned to attend the New York gathering of farmers, labor advocates and academics from around the world on Thursday and Friday, participating in forums titled "Fighting the Commodification of Food" and "The Struggle Against Monsanto in Europe." The conference was sponsored by Cornell's School of Labor and Industrial Relations in upstate Ithaca, N.Y., where Bove planned to address students and visit farmers.
He said he would speak to the gathering from France via speaker phone on Friday.
"I'm going to talk about the struggle of farmers all over the world for seeds," he told the AP. "Big companies like Monsanto have patents on genetically modified seeds, and you have to buy those seeds each year – you can't keep the ones you have. That's how they control food in the world, by controlling what farmers put in the soil."
Bove, who raises sheep and produces cheese, shot to fame in 1999 after leading protesters who dismantled a McDonald's restaurant under construction in Millau, near his farm in southern France.
He also participated in protests during the World Trade Organization meetings held in December in Hong Kong, where he was briefly detained but eventually allowed to enter.
A month earlier, he was sentenced to four months in prison for destroying a field of genetically modified corn planted by an American seed company in southern France.
Associated Press Writer Tim McCahill contributed to this report.