April
17, 2024 –
International Day
of Peasant
Struggles
On
April 17, we mark the
International Day of
Peasant Struggles, our
annual action day that
brings us together to
commemorate the
Eldorado do Carajás
massacre* in 1996 and
to honor the
resistance of peasants
worldwide who persist
in their struggle for
social justice and
dignity.
Following
our 8th international conference last December,
we, peasants, youth,
women, men, and
diversities, migrants,
rural and landless
workers, fisherfolk,
and indigenous
peoples, stand with
renewed hope and
strength, heightened
awareness, unwavering
commitment, organized
unity, and
determination to
confront the
multifaceted crises.
We continue an
unwavering fight
against genocides,
wars, violations of
people’s sovereignty,
evictions of peasant
families, the
criminalization and
persecution of
peasants and their
leaders, as well as
extractivism and
violations of
peasants’ rights.
United, we safeguard
our mother earth
against the grip of
agribusiness
multinationals,
neocolonialists,
fascists, and
repressive military
forces.
This
devastation involves
various actors in the
shadows, notably
neoliberal
institutions such as
the WTO, the World
Bank, and the
International Monetary
Fund. Their
interference in
national agricultural
policies, related to
trade, and social
protections, is
evident. Free trade
agreements (FTAs) and
other economic
partnership frameworks
imposing neoliberal
conditions linked to
loans and financial
assistance programs,
or measures favoring
the interests of
corporations,
jeopardize the
livelihoods of
peasants, agricultural
workers, and migrants.
Yet, it is the
peasants who provide
sustenance to 70% of
the global population
with healthy and
quality food.
Poster:Inspired by the
Andean
cosmovision, our
poster this year
reflects the
interconnectedness
of all elements
of nature, with
humanity as an
integral part.
It illustrates
how Mother Earth
supports
peasants and
their struggles,
defending their
existence and
rights.
According to
this vision, we
can also be an
offering of the
earth, even as
part of a
collective
movement like
the peasantry.
Portrayed as a
unifying force,
Mother Earth
sustains us,
alongside its
natural
expressions,
with mountains
symbolizing our
ancestors and
collective
memory.
Enough with
the genocide,
evictions and
violence!
Today,
the world witnesses
multiple crises
affecting every aspect
of life on Earth. The
capitalist system now
reveals its true
destructive nature,
driving peasants in
Asia and other parts
of the world to
suicide due to
unpayable debts. It
corrupts governments
in the interest of a
few elites, violating
nature and ecological
balance, thereby
compromising the
future of humanity.
This system generates
genocides, not only
through militarism but
also by denying access
to food, using
starvation as a weapon
of war, as currently
seen in Gaza. It also
takes the form of slow
genocide, as
experienced by the
Haitian population
with anti-peasant
policies and
gangsterization
orchestrated to
facilitate a new
foreign intervention,
allowing the seizure
of peasant lands and
the looting of
commons.
Neocolonialism
is inherent in this
system, extending to
countries like Niger,
where EU sanctions
affect the right to
food of the
populations. Political
and armed conflicts
provoked in Libya,
Syria, and Sudan have
led to massive
population
displacements,
infrastructure
destruction, and
difficulties in
accessing agricultural
lands. In countries
such as Guatemala,
Argentina, Paraguay,
and Turkey,
multinational
corporations impose
their profits over the
fundamental rights of
peasant families,
leading to their
eviction and the
exploitation of Mother
Earth. This capitalist
logic undermines
peasant struggles for
peasant rights, food
sovereignty,
sustainable and
diversified
agroecological
production methods,
family farms,
biodiversity
preservation, and
peace, with social
justice serving as
peasant solutions to
the food and climate
crisis**. It crushes
diversity in all its
gender and ethnic
forms and ignores
local and ancestral
agricultural
knowledge, masking its
true intentions behind
development solutions
that serve only the
economic interests of
a minority. Those who
control and commodify
our commons hinder
youth peasants from
accessing land and
break the autonomy of
peasants and peoples,
pushing them toward
agrarian conflicts,
poverty, starvation,
and agriculture
without peasants.
Build
Solidarity, Unite
for Food
Sovereignty!
2024
started with massive
protests of peasant
farmers in Europe,
Asia, and other parts
of the world against
destructive
agricultural policies.
These demonstrations
are not limited to
seeking fair prices
and a dignified life
for peasants but also
express the need for a
society oriented
toward a future where
peasant agroecology
prevails over
agribusiness methods
and where social
justice and the
dignity of everyone
are ensured. It is
imperative to
guarantee that no one
is forced to leave
their land, family,
and culture to seek a
better life elsewhere
while sacrificing
their lives to feed
their families.
Our
peasant struggles,
deeply rooted in the
principles of food
sovereignty, aim to
establish an inclusive
system that promotes
rural economies and
sustains the
livelihoods of
peasants, while
cultivating hope to
mitigate tragedies
such as suicide,
family breakdowns, and
forced migration in
rural areas.
Recognizing food
sovereignty, popular
agrarian reform and
peasant agroecology as
genuine solutions to
global crises, La Via
Campesina fervently
advocates for the
implementation of the
United Nations Declaration on the Rights of
Peasants and Other
People Working in
Rural Areas (UNDROP),
a vital international
instrument addressing
the multifaceted
crises faced by
peasants. Furthermore,
we advocate for the establishment of a new international trade
framework based on
cooperation and food
sovereignty to
challenge the
neoliberal trade
system perpetuating
hunger.
Simultaneously, we are
preparing for the
Nyéléni World Forum in
2025, which will
convene the
international movement
for food sovereignty
to confront the
challenges of hunger
and poverty by
advancing the
development and
fortification of local
economies.
On
April 17, we will
occupy the streets and
all spaces where
peasant struggles are
left to forcefully
reaffirm our peasant
path and strengthen
food sovereignty in
our territories. We
strongly urge all
members, allies, and
supporters of La Via
Campesina to mobilize
now and throughout
April, united in a
single solidarity
voice to support the
struggles of peasants
against global crises.
Build
Solidarity! Enough
with the genocide,
evictions and
violence!
Download
our communication kit to disseminate the official
materials, including
our poster of April
17. Translate it into your local languages, and
engage in solidarity
actions in support
of peasant struggles
in your country and
everywhere in the
world.
Organize
activities,
webinars, and
workshops focused on
the rights and
struggles of
peasants, including
access to land, fair
pricing, the
promotion of peasant
agroecology and
seeds, as well as
the defense of
people’s
sovereignty, among
others.
Write
declarations,
articles, and create
impactful
audiovisual material
to amplify the
voices of peasant
struggles and
promote food
sovereignty. You can
then share your
contributions with
us at the following
address: communications@viacampesina.org
You
can use these
hashtags to
associate your
social media
contributions with
the global campaign
for Peasant
Struggles: Main:
#17April
#PeasantStruggles#FoodSovereigntyNow
#PeasantsRightsNow;
Complementary:
#IncomeForFarmers#CeaseFire #StopGazaStarvation #HaitianSolutionForHaiti
Get
involved in all
actions and protests
against the genocide
in Gaza, foreign
interference in
Haiti, economic
sanctions in Niger,
evictions of
peasants, impunity
for human rights
violations, free
trade agreements,
rural indebtedness,
false solutions to
the food and climate
crisis, measures
favoring
multinational
interests over
people’s
sovereignty, and
other peasant
struggles in your
territories.
-------------
* Twenty-eight years
after the tragic
massacre of landless
peasants by Brazilian
military police,
impunity persists for
crimes committed against
rural communities.
Although two agents were
convicted in 2012, no
other police or
political officials have
been held accountable.
Autopsies revealed
executions and serious
injuries, leaving 69
wounded and a total of
21 dead.
** The challenges facing
women and the impact of
the climate crisis are
exacerbating the
difficulties faced by
farmers. The United
Nations (UN) has stated
that by 2030, around one
in four women will face
food insecurity. Source
: https://news.un.org/es/story/2023/09/1523922