Jos Bov

Jos Bov (born June 11, 1953) is a French farmer, anarcho-syndicalist, and member of the anti-globalization movement, and spokesperson for Via Campesina. Bov is the son of two agricultural chemists. He was born in Bordeaux, but raised in many different places, both inside and outside France, including Berkeley, California in the United States. His father Joseph, originally from Luxembourg, became a French citizen as he took on the role of regional director of the National Institute of Agricultural Sciences Research (Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique or INRA) and member of the French Academy of Sciences. His mother is a professor of natural sciences. Bov speaks English fluently, having followed his parents to Berkeley at the age of three, when they were invited to be researchers at the University of California, Berkeley. After attending secondary school near Paris (from which he was expelled for being "faithless"), he spurned University and instead joined a group of conscientious objectors to military service. This work led him into the occupation of lands in the Larzac which were to be attributed to the French military, where he joined a band of peasants illegally building a sheep barn. There, he learned how to become a dairy farmer, and eventually became a sheep farmer, producing roquefort cheese. He remained a farmer and an activist. In 1987, he formed the Confdration Paysanne (la Conf), an agricultural union that places its highest political values on humans and the environment. In opposition to many companies in the profit-oriented agro-industry, Bov is a prominent opponent of genetically modified organisms. In 1995, he joined Greenpeace on their ship, the Rainbow Warrior, in opposition to nuclear weapons testing in the Pacific Ocean. In 1999, the United States placed tariffs on the importation of Roquefort cheese as punishment for the European Union's restrictions on importing hormone-treated beef. In response, Bov and other Confdration activists dismantled a half-built McDonald's franchise in Millau (Aveyron). Bov was sentenced to three months in prison for his role in the incident. He was imprisoned 44 days, and was finally released on August 1, 2002. His involvement in this incident garnered world attention to himself and his causes. Since then, he has redoubled his efforts in the world peasant and anti-globalization movements. He was present at the 1999 protests of the World Trade Organization in Seattle; In 2001, he took part in a large action destroying genetically modified crops in Brazil. In 2002, he was arrested and deported by Israeli police while protesting in Ramallah against Israeli control of the West Bank and Gaza; upon his return to France, he was assaulted at Orly Airport by members of the Betar, a Zionist Jewish organization. He has also intervened to support the movements of the Tahitians and the Kanaks, an indigenous Melanesian people comprising a large minority of residents in New Caledonia. On April of 2003, Roger Cukierman, head of France's CRIF umbrella group for Jewish organizations, spoke out against Bove for his meeting of Yasser Arafat, the head of the PLO, during Israel's siege of Arafat's compound. 1 On June 22, 2003, Bov began serving a sentence of ten months for the destruction of transgenic crops. ATTAC protested and called for him to be freed. A general pardon for Bastille Day, plus an individual action by President Jacques Chirac, reduced the sentence to end in December. The Left and the Right expressed dissatisfaction with the Presidential pardon on the grounds that it was entirely inadequate and wholly unjustified, respectively. On April 23, 2004, Jose Bov announced that he would join the People's Congress of Kurdistan (Kongra-Gel), a Marxist-Leninist group which is on the European Union's list of terrorist groups, blamed for attacks totaling over 800 deaths.2

External links

Bov, Jos

 

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