From Biodevastation to Biojustice: A brief history
May4

This year’s Biojustice events in Boston continue a series of international grassroots gatherings on issues of genetic engineering and corporate dominance over our food and health that began seven years ago in St. Louis. Since May of 1999, most of these gatherings have coincided with the annual convention of BIO, the Biotechnology Industry Organization.
This historic series of events began in Monsanto’s home city of St. Louis in July of 1998. The “First International Grassroots Gathering on Biodevastation” was called by members of the Gateway Green Alliance in St. Louis to bring together grassroots opponents of genetic engineering to learn and strategize. Participants included concerned scientists and representatives of popular movements from Ireland, England, Mexico, Canada the European Parliament, India and the United States, as well as a large contingent of farmer and consumer activists from Japan. There was a demonstration of over 200 people at Monsanto world headquarters in the St. Louis suburbs.
Following her keynote appearance at the St. Louis gathering, Dr. Vandana Shiva invited representatives of grassroots environmental, consumer and farm organizations to New Delhi, India in March of 1999 for “Biodevastation 2.” A small contingent of activists from the U.S., Canada and Europe, met with people from all over India, Malaysia, Bangladesh and Japan to discuss genetic engineering, patenting of life, and the alternatives. Participants traveled to visit farmers in many parts of India who are opposing Monsanto and other biotech companies, while working to preserve native seed varieties and traditional growing methods.
In India, activists learned that BIO would be having their annual convention in Seattle during May of 1999 and called for Biodevastation 3 to be held in Seattle during the BIO convention. Biodevastation 3 began with a colorful march through the streets of Seattle, followed by a rally and a spontaneous walk through the Seattle Convention Center. This event also focused on the dangers of human genetic manipulation. Biodevastation 3 concluded on the day the worldwide media announced that pollen from genetically engineered corn can kill large numbers of young monarch butterfly larvae.
The fourth gathering, Biodevastation 2000, was timed to coincide with that year’s BIO convention in Boston. Biodevastation 2000 was co-sponsored and supported by nearly 30 regional and national organizations and featured a rally and parade to the Hynes Convention Center in downtown Boston that drew nearly 3000 participants. This was the largest ever gathering in opposition to genetic engineering anywhere in North America to date. Panelists and workshop speakers at the three-day Biodevastation conference included scientists, farmers and activists from India, the Philippines, England, South Africa, Canada, Uruguay and all over the United States. Vandana Shiva, Ralph Nader and Barry Commoner were keynote speakers, and the world renowned Bread and Puppet Theater led the colorful and lively parade.
In 2001, BIO’s convention took place in San Diego, California, a city with a military-dominated history and culture. Despite a severe overreaction on the part of local police and a hostile media climate, some 1200 people marched peacefully on the city’s Convention Center on the opening day of the BIO convention. This event was named “Biojustice,” and the teach-in was dubbed “Beyond Biodevastation,” featuring speakers on biopiracy from Mexico and the Philippines, as well as a diverse group of scientists, farmers and activists from North America, Europe and India. There was a heightened focus on sustainable agriculture, disability and genetic discrimination issues. These events were featured prominently on CNN and NBC News, as well as all the major wire services and regional California media outlets.
bioJUSTICE/bioDIVERSITY 2002 brought the series to Canada for the first time, with support from the Ottawa-based Polaris Institute, the Council of Canadians, and a broad coalition of environmental and safe food advocates in Toronto, where that year’s BIO convention was held. Issues of drug safety and corporate abuses in medical research are much more prominent in Canada than in the U.S., and some of the leading experts on these topics participated, along with speakers on GE food, indigenous responses to biopiracy, and the growing threat of biological warfare. Once again, Vandana Shiva was a keynote speaker, along with David Suzuki, who appeared at a colorful GE-free picnic at Toronto’s Grange Park on the opening Sunday of the BIO convention.
In 2003 the Gateway Green Alliance initiated an event in St. Louis, this time focusing on the links between corporate control, environmental racism, agriculture and biowarfare. It coincided with the semi-annual meeting of the World Agricultural Forum (WAF), created by Monsanto and other agribusiness companies to offer an agricultural counterpart to the annual World Economic Forums in Davos, Switzerland. Biodevastation 7 featured discussions on the international threat to farms and farmers, globalization and food imperialism, indigenous agriculture, biowarfare and the direct links between biotechnology and environmental racism. There were speakers from Africa, Mexico, India, the UK and Canada, as well as throughout the US.
Meanwhile, a group of activist bicyclists and puppeteers planned a Caravan Across the Cornbelt, which aimed to link the WAF with the upcoming BIO convention in Washington, DC. They staged a series of performances throughout Indiana, Kentucky and Ohio. Organizers also discovered that the USDA was planning for an international summit of agriculture and trade ministers in Sacramento in June 2003, and the focus for June shifted from the BIO convention to the USDA ministerial.
The Sacramento Mobilization for Food Sovereignty, Democracy And Justice attracted the support of 130 organizations"including the United Farm Workers’ union and the international farmers’ movement Via Campesina"and focused public attention on the role of the Sacramento Ministerial in US government preparations for the upcoming fall WTO meetings in Cancun, Mexico. It featured a standing-room-only teach-in at Sacramento State University, several days of direct actions focused on the WTO and corporate agribusiness, and a huge rally and parade, which proved to be a massive festival of resistance to biotechnology, industrial agriculture, globalization and US imperial designs around the world. Direct actions included a lock-down in support of a local community garden, climbers protesting genetically engineered trees, and farmers dumping GE corn, as well as several days of street protests around the Sacramento Convention Center. Monday’s march and parade around Sacramento drew well over 4000 participants.
The 2004 event in San Francisco took up the theme of “Reclaim the Commons.” Aiming at a broad analysis of the roots of domination and injustice, San Francisco activists sought to explore the theft and privatization of the physical, intellectual, and now, biological commons. This event sought to illuminate the central role of the public commons for democracy, for racial, economic, and social justice, and for a diverse and sustainable society. Following Sacramento, the Reclaim the Commons mobilization highlighted movements for food sovereignty, along with the myths of “biodefense” and biotech barriers to medical justice, while showcasing ecological alternatives taking shape throughout the Bay Area. In addition to a teach-in and a day of street demonstrations around the BIO convention, there was a Racial Justice Day of Action, and also a day focused on Planting Alternatives, most notably a series of permaculture-inspired projects in several of San Francisco’s inner city communities.
In 2005, “Biodemocracy” was the theme of a series of events in Philadelphia that brought together critical voices from throughout the northeast, along with international guests, to expose the injustices wrought by the biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries. This was the first event to focus on the three-part theme of resistance to genetically engineered food, corporate control over healthcare, and the threat of expanding biological weapons research in the US. Local activists staged a festival of alternatives, an internationally-focused teach-in, a parade through downtown Philadelphia, and a variety of other actions to highlight long-range visions for a more sustainable way of life.
Biojustice 2007 aims to continue in this vein, focusing on a similar range of problems perpetrated by the corporations that support the annual BIO convention. There are keynote panels on international food issues and corporate control over healthcare, a day of Environmental Justice events in solidarity with activists opposing Boston University’s proposed bioweapons lab, and participation in Jamaica Plain’s annual Wake Up The Earth Festival. Activists will also assist at a community garden in Dorchester, attend the premiere reading of a screenplay on human cloning, and join a host of other activities.

Contact Info: 
Contact: Brian Tokar, ISE Biotechnology Project: 617-513-1241 or 802-229-0087 biotech@social-ecology.org; Erin Ryan Fitzgerald, BioJustice: 781-492-0795 erf@riseup.net; Ben Grosscup, Press Coordinator, NOFA/Mass: 413-658-5374 ben.grosscup@nofamass.org