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Gates Foundation accused of 'dangerously skewing' aid priorities by promoting 'corporate globalisation'
Key Excerpts from Article on Website of The Independent (One of the UK's leading newspapers)
Posted: February 7th, 2016
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/politics/gates-found...
Bill and Melinda Gates are facing calls for their philanthropic Foundation, through which they have donated billions worldwide, to be subject to an international investigation. The Gates Foundation is about benefiting big business, especially in agriculture and health, through its ideological commitment to promote neoliberal economic policies and corporate globalisation, according to [a] report published by the campaign group Global Justice Now. The report accuses the Gates Foundation of [turning] basic needs into commodities controlled by the market. The report is critical of the close working relations between the Foundation and major international pharmaceutical corporations. It accuses the Gates Foundation of promoting specific priorities through agriculture grants, some of which undermine the interests of small farmers. These include promoting industrial agriculture, use of chemical fertilisers and expensive, patented seeds, and a focus on genetically modified seeds. The criticism echoes the accusations made by the Indian scientist Vandana Shiva who called the Gates Foundation the greatest threat to farmers in the developing world. The Foundations emphasis on technological solutions often ignores real solutions involving social and economic justice. This cannot be given by donors in the form of a climate-resilient crop or cheaper smartphone, but must be about systemic social, economic and political change issues not represented in the foundations funding priorities.
Note: The Gates Foundation is heavily invested in GMO giants like Monsanto. It also provided $5 million to Oxitec, a company criticized for secretly releasing GM mosquitoes into the wild in 2009. Oxitec was purchased last August by biotech giant Intrexon for $160 million. By December, the Zika virus was all over the news and Intrexon was ramping up production of these GM insects to "fight Zika" in Brazil. For more along these lines, see concise summaries of deeply revealing corporate corruption news articles from reliable major media sources.