Monsanto Controversy
An official release of the United States Agency for International Development’s Nepal office posted on its official website on September 13 had an eye-catching headline- "USAID teams with the Ministry of Agriculture & Cooperatives and the Monsanto Company to enhance maize production in Nepal.” On November 18, USAID posted a status on its Facebook Page--almost opposite of its own version of the earlier release. The three paragraph text says "No new programs have been entered into by the US Government with the Government of Nepal (GoN) to introduce hybrid maize seeds."
The days between the two postings amply demonstrates how things are done in Nepal, how much USAID cares about providing facts to the media and so on.
On September 13, USAID Nepal had organized a one-day workshop in the Hotel Himalaya which was inaugurated by Agriculture & Cooperatives (MoAC) Umakant Jha. The USAID release that followed claimed that ‘secretary Jha appreciated the opportunity to work with USAID, particularly on this maize initiative.’ But, secretary Jha later publicly refuted it and said what was attributed to him was ‘baseless and completely wrong'. "I was present in that workshop and there was a presentation on Monsanto,” Jha said, adding “I was just listening to the discussion but I have no idea about any partnership between MoAC and USAID to bring Monsanto in Nepal." Monsanto is an American multinational agricultural biotechnology corporation which is the leading producer of hybrid glyphosate and Genetically Engineered Seeds.
Soon after Jha’s rebuttal, USAID officials told me that they had no idea what Jha ‘s statement in the media was all about, ‘ but the government of Nepal and USAID are working together to bring Monsanto in Nepal to distribute hybrid maize seeds. Stuti Basnyat, communication officer in the USAID said, "I don't know what secretary Jha told you but we are working towards having an agreement among USAID, GoN and Monsanto."
While the first release mentioned Monsanto five times, but the update in the Facebook less than two months later omitted the name . It simply talks about promoting hybrid seeds.
The two releases and the period in between have fuelled enough controversy , and there has been no convincing clarification issued from any side Neither the GoN nor the USAID have tried to explain how hybrid seeds are different from the traditional ones. Dragged into the controversy, the USAID now insists that it will only respond to an email query. On the Nepal government side, Jha has been transferred to the Ministry of Industry, and many read his going against USAID has cost him earlier job. But the Ministry of Agriculture even without Jha refuses to bail out USAID.
Elaborating the genesis of the controversy, Dr. Hari Dahal, MoAC Spokesperson said that ‘ one official from USAID had come to the ministry with Monsanto proposal to discuss, but no concrete decision was taken’ . He also challenged the USAID to publicize the documents or evidence, if any, to suggest a deal was in the offing ‘Ministry of Agriculture is not as techno-savvy as USAID is, ‘but facts speak for themselves,’ MOAC officials say.
The current controversy somehow discredits the USAID that has been working in Nepal for the last six decades with substantial support to many developmental projects, and contributed a lot towards Nepal’s journey to a modern and developing country. But like some other bilateral donor agencies, USAID spending money directly in the name of development (bypassing the government) has of late is also becoming an issue in the country.
In its the Facebook posting, USAID claims that the US mission remains committed development partner to the GoN. While this is true in many ways, the word ‘commitment’ can not bypass the existing rules of the government. The development agency that dismisses its official press release through a posting in the face-book is not a practice that can be called responsible. The episode may perhaps provoke many donors to review their similar approach , and perhaps it is also the time for the UN Resident office to take cognizance of this.