Will  governments agree to kill tobacco farming? 
Tobacco farmers around the world will turn  their attention to Seoul this week when officials representing more than 170  governments meet to decide their future.
The occasion is the World Health Organization's  biennial gathering to amend its Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. This  will be the fifth such session since the FCTC went into force in 2005.
Technically known as the fifth Conference of  the Parties (CoP5), the week-long meeting at COEX in Gangnam will focus on  controversial proposals that attempt to artificially reduce, and eventually  phase out the crop through absurd regulations that will have no impact on  smoking rates in the world.  Although  their livelihoods are at stake, not one of the 30 million people who are  dependent on tobacco farming worldwide has been invited to attend COP5. Among  those being affected will be 25,000 Koreans who are dependent with tobacco  farming.
On the table are illogical measures such as  regulating the seasons tobacco can be grown and limiting the land on which it  can be grown.  These ideas are so radical  that even tobacco control advocates are calling them "simply impractical." 
The FCTC is also calling on governments to  outlaw financial support to tobacco growers, banning technical assistance and  contracts between growers and buyers, dismantling the bodies linking growers to  governments, and banning minimum prices.   And although the recommendations contain some guidance on how to  identify and promote economically viable alternatives for tobacco farmers, we  are a very long way from being able to provide adequate solutions for farmers  in every corner of the world whose livelihoods would be affected by these  measures.
If passed, these recommendations will become  "guidelines" that the governments that have ratified the FCTC, including  Korea's, will be pressured to implement.
Putting aside the absurdity of their policies,  these proposals represent an unnerving mission creep from the FCTC's original  goal of promoting alternative crop strategies so tobacco growers could adapt to  an anticipated reduction in demand for tobacco and of ensuring fair and safe  working conditions and environmental sustainability where tobacco farming  continues.  It now appears that the  ideologues who are driving the agenda at these meetings are shifting their  strategy away from combating the harm from smoking and toward destroying the  livelihoods of millions of farmers with policies that have nothing to do with  improving public health.
The International Tobacco Growers Association  (ITGA) and its members have stood together in supporting the original goals of  the FCTC related to production.  However,  we now stand together in opposing this shift away from what was a laudable core  mission to one that stands to destroy the lives of many growers.
Although we are not invited to the meeting this  week, our combined efforts have given us a legitimate voice, which we were  previously denied, in the debate in many of our home countries where governments  have stood with us to oppose these proposals. Today we are asking the voting  representatives of more than 170 countries to join them.
The Conference about to commence in Seoul is  the moment of truth.  This is the moment  that we will discover whether or not the voices of more than 30 million  farmers, and the many leaders supporting us, will be acknowledged, or whether  we will be ignored.  This is the time we  will discover whether the FCTC will remain focused on its original mission of  addressing tobacco harm, or if it will be driven by ideologues trying to put  their hand on the lever of the marketplace at the expense of millions of people  who work hard every day to support their families.
As farmers, we have the right to choose what we  grow.  We should be free to grow what we  know provides a decent standard of living for our families.  Robbing us of this right not only threatens  our standard of living and that of our families, it threatens to slash the jobs  of millions of farmers and laborers from communities that are already on the  brink and a global economy that's already in dire straits. 
We growers are fully aware that the crop on  which our livelihoods depend is controversial.   But delegates at the CoP5 cannot gloss over this simple truth: tobacco growing  is entirely legal, demand has been and will continue to rise, it keeps more  than 30 million farmers and their dependents actively employed, and it plays a  critical role in stabilizing many economies worldwide.
Any proposals to throw such a large community  out of work for whatever cause needs to be justified in a way that the global  community can accept and in its implementation requires careful consideration  from all angles, legal and moral, as well as practical and economic. These  proposals have not received that level of open scrutiny.
It cannot be left to a handful of people  running a fantasy revolution.
CoP5 was attended by the Philippines which bags  Orchid award for not inviting tobacco growers to participate the said summit. 
The Korea Times 
 




 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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