Government of Mozambique is expected to
approve Prosavana project this year The master plan of Prosavana, a
large agricultural project to be implemented in three northern
provinces of Mozambique, is due to be approved by the government by
the end of 2015, the project’s coordinator said in Maputo. António
Limbau also told Portuguese news agency Lusa that the master plan for
Prosavana, to be conducted in partnership with the governments of
Brazil and Japan, has already been through the stages of public
consultation at district and provincial levels and now requires
consultations on a national level, to be held in Maputo. This project
has led to fears that the communities in the programme would lose
their land and prompted protests from inhabitants of the Nacala
corridor and by several non-governmental organisations, who
questioned the results of a similar experience in Brazil. According
to the programme’s coordinator, the main concerns raised by farmers
during the public consultation meetings were related to the fear of
land loss, despite government assurances that this would not happen
in Mozambique and that joining the programme is not compulsory . The
biggest steps “have been taken,” the programme coordinator said,
who, after the approval of the master plan, expects to see Prosavana
launched in 2016. Prosavana is intended to improve the living
conditions of the Nacala corridor’s population, modernise
agriculture, increase productivity and create new models of
agricultural development, currently based on family subsistence
production, and to guide them to the market.
Resistance to Prosavana in
Mozambique
PROSAVANA is a cooperation program between Mozambique, Brazil and Japan, which aims to create new models of sustainable agricultural development in Mozambique's savanna region, taking into consideration the conservation of the environment; searching for agrarian development; and oriented to the rural/regional competitive markets. This presentation looks at who is behind the project, the aims of the project and the resistance to the project. The resistance stems from the fact that PROSAVANA aims to integrate peasants in the production process which is exclusively controlled by large TNCs and multilateral financing institutions; there is manipulation of information and intimidation of communities and CSOs opposed to PROSAVANA; there are imminent land grabbing processes in local communities by Brazilian, Japanese and national (as well as other nations) corporations and governments. The presentation argues that with PROSAVANA, the Mozambican government is in fact importing the internal contradictions of the Brazilian agrarian development model.
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PROSAVANA is a cooperation program between Mozambique, Brazil and Japan, which aims to create new models of sustainable agricultural development in Mozambique's savanna region, taking into consideration the conservation of the environment; searching for agrarian development; and oriented to the rural/regional competitive markets. This presentation looks at who is behind the project, the aims of the project and the resistance to the project. The resistance stems from the fact that PROSAVANA aims to integrate peasants in the production process which is exclusively controlled by large TNCs and multilateral financing institutions; there is manipulation of information and intimidation of communities and CSOs opposed to PROSAVANA; there are imminent land grabbing processes in local communities by Brazilian, Japanese and national (as well as other nations) corporations and governments. The presentation argues that with PROSAVANA, the Mozambican government is in fact importing the internal contradictions of the Brazilian agrarian development model.
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1 comment:
Now, ProSAVANA’s controversial history is repeating itself as farce. The Mozambique Council of Ministers is considering a massive project along the Lurio River in northern Mozambique without consulting the estimated 500,000 affected people in the project area. - See more at: http://farmlandgrab.org/post/view/24925#sthash.jRiipunJ.dpuf
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