Monsanto could pay $7.5 billion settlement to millions of Brazilian soy farmers
 (NaturalNews) For at least a decade, Monsanto, the world's most evil  corporation, has been illegally charging Brazilian farmers growing the  company's genetically-modified (GM) crops a two percent tax on  production, and a three percent tax for cross-contamination of seed, say  plaintiffs in a new lawsuit. And according to CorpWatch, the  agri-giant could soon have to fork over $7.5 billion in reimbursements  to more than five million Brazilian farmers as a result of these blatant  crimes.
Oddly enough, Monsanto's very presence in Brazil was  predicated on fraud, as its GM soy seeds were first smuggled into the  country illegally back in 1998. Fast forward about 13 years and nearly  75 million acres of arable land in Brazil are now occupied by Monsanto's  GM crops, the vast majority of which constitute Roundup Ready soy.
But  the entire Monsanto growing system for GMOs, which prohibits farmers  from freely saving seeds and reusing them the following year -- and in  this case, requires farmers to pay private taxes directly to Monsanto to  do so -- is entirely against the law in Brazil. Even though former  Brazilian President Luiz Inacio "Lula" Da Silva basically  grandfathered-in legalization for Monsanto's GM crops back in 2005  because they were already being widely grown in the country illegally,  Monsanto is still breaking the law by levying taxes against farmers and  requiring them to pay royalties.
"The law gives producers the  right to multiply the seeds they buy and nowhere in the world is there a  requirement to pay (again)," said Jane Berwanger, a lawyer representing  the Brazilian farmers in the case, concerning Monsanto's illegal user  fees and taxes. "Producers are in effect paying a private tax on  production."
Back in April, a judge in Rio Grande Do Sul,  Brazil's southernmost state, ruled that Monsanto's user fees were  illegal, and ordered the company to not only stop collecting them, but  also to begin reimbursing farmers in that state for all fees collected  since 2004. This judge also noted that Monsanto's Roundup Ready seed  patent has also already expired in Brazil.
Monsanto is attempting  to appeal this decision, of course, but in the process could be making  its final penalty even worse. And in response to this appeal, the  Brazilian Supreme Court has decided that the Rio Grande Do Sul court's  ultimate ruling, whatever that ends up being, will apply to every farmer  throughout the country, and not just in Rio Grande Do Sul, which could  make the final penalty for Monsanto upwards of $7.5 billion.
Monsanto  has indicated that it plans to continue collecting fees and charging  taxes until the courts issue their final ruling on the matter. But this  ruling is not expected to be issued until 2014.
Sources for this article include:
http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=15747
http://en.mercopress.com
http://www.qwmagazine.com
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