Money woes lead to end of international farm group

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: March 10, 2011

After more than six decades as an international voice of farmer interests, the Paris-based International Federation of Agricultural Producers has collapsed.

Canadian farm representatives with strong ties to IFAP say the organization was a victim of dysfunctional leadership and financial problems.

“They had some accountability and governance issues,” says Canadian Federation of Agriculture president Ron Bonnett, who was an IFAP executive committee member.

Jack Wilkinson, a former CFA president who served six years as IFAP president, said the death of the organization was shocking.

Read Also

Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe takes questions from reporters in Saskatoon International Airport.

Government, industry seek canola tariff resolution

Governments and industry continue to discuss how best to deal with Chinese tariffs on Canadian agricultural products, particularly canola.

“It was a very big disappointment for a lot of us.”

Wilkinson, whose term as IFAP president ended in 2008, thought the organization was healthy and had reached an unprecedented level of credibility.

“It was in pretty good shape,” he said from his northern Ontario farm.

“I worked pretty well full-time as president for six years and I think IFAP had gained a position as the go-to farm organization when groups like the World Bank, the United Nations, IMF (International Monetary Fund) and FAO (United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization) were discussing food policy and wanted a farmer view.”

He said with food issues, food prices and world hunger increasingly on the international political agenda, a credible farmer voice is more important than ever.

When Wilkinson stepped down at a federation meeting in Warsaw, Poland in 2008, delegates made history by electing the first developing country president in its then-63-year history – Ajay Vashee from Zambia.

Wilkinson said the organization began to spiral toward insolvency when a Dutch organization failed to honour a promise to reimburse IFAP for the costs of some development projects.

Vashee’s leadership style also became part of the problem, he said

In late March in Brussels, Belgium, representatives from a small group of countries will meet to try to create something out of the IFAP ashes – a World Farmers’ Platform that would try to represent farmer issues on a reduced scale at international levels.

Canada will be one of the countries represented through Bonnett, and the CFA has budgeted $28,000 this year toward the attempt at creating a new international farmers’ voice.

The CFA was one of IFAP’s biggest supporters, contributing $84,000 in annual dues.

IFAP was created in 1946 as a way to speak for farmers during post-war reconstruction.

Four Canadian farm leaders including Wilkinson and former CFA president Glenn Flaten led the organization as president for 15 years.

About the author

Barry Wilson

Barry Wilson is a former Ottawa correspondent for The Western Producer.

explore

Stories from our other publications