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Thu, 31 Jul 2003 03:57:09 +0100

 

GM Potato = Malnutrition

press-release

 

The Institute of Science in Society

Science Society Sustainability

http://www.i-sis.org.uk

 

General Enquiries sam

Website/Mailing List press-release

ISIS Director m.w.ho

===================================================

 

GM Potato = Malnutrition

************************

A GM potato will solve Third World hunger, said pro-GM scientists in India and

Britain. Dr. Vandana Shiva and Afsar Jafri expose the lies they tell to force GM

foods on a defiant world that will also put school children at risk from

malnutrition by displacing nutrient-rich indigenous staples.

 

At the start of Britain’s public GM debate in June, the British Broadcasting

Corporation (BBC) said that approval for commercial growing of a genetically

modified potato is expected in India within six months. Indian scientists were

reported to have said that the protein-rich genetically modified potato could

help combat malnutrition in India. This is reminiscent of an earlier attempt by

pro-GM scientists to convince critics that GM ‘golden rice’ is needed to cure

vitamin A deficiency among the poor in the Third World, a ‘potential benefit’

that’s being hyped by the pro-GM British scientific establishment to this day.

 

At the Research Foundation for Science, Technology and Ecology (RFSTE), we have

shown that fruits and green vegetables that could be grown in every backyard

provide hundreds of times more Vitamin A than ‘golden rice’.

 

Now the people of India and the rest of the world are sold a ‘protein-rich

potato’ hoax by our scientists as part of an anti-hunger plan, formulated

jointly with government institutes, the biotech industry and charities. The

potato, it is claimed, contains a third more protein than normal, including

essential high-quality nutrients, and has been created by adding a gene from the

protein-rich amaranth plant.

 

According to the BBC, Dr. Manju Sharma, Head of the Department of Biotechnology

(DBT), said that the GM potato will " reduce the problem of malnutrition in the

country " , and she plans to incorporate it into the government’s free midday meal

programme in schools.

 

But, inserting protein genes from amaranth into potatoes and promoting potato as

a staple for school-children’s mid-day meals is also a decision not to promote

amaranth and pulses, the most important source of protein in the Indian diet.

Amaranth contains 14.7 gm protein per 100 gm of dried grain, compared to 6.8

gm/100gm milled rice, 11 gm/100gm wheat flour and a mere 1.6 gm/100 gm potato.

 

Compared to the nutritional value of grains like amaranth, GM potatoes will

actually create malnutrition because it will represent a huge protein deficit,

and deny to vulnerable children many other essential nutrients present in much

higher amounts in amaranth (see Table 1) or that are not available in potato.

 

 

 

Table 1. Nutritional content of Amaranth compared with GM potato

--

Content (per 100gm)

Nutrient | Amaranth | Potato | Deficit

Protein | 14.7gm | 2.1gm* | - 12.6gm

Iron+ | 11.0mg | 0.7mg | - 10.3mg

Calcium+ | 510.0mg | 10.0mg | -500.0mg

--

*Assuming an increase of 33% protein content in GM potato, as reported.

+Assuming these remain unchanged.

 

 

 

As can be seen, the GM potato will actually cause severe iron and calcium

deficiencies in children as well as severe protein deficiency. The ancient

people of the Andes regarded amaranth sacred. In India, it is called " Ramdana "

or God’s own grain. The root word " amara " , in both Greek and Sanskrit means

eternal or deathless. A much smarter option is to promote the widespread

cultivation and use of amazing grains like amaranth. [Editor’s note: In Britain,

amaranth has already entered the specialty market as a high protein and

nutritious breakfast cereal, thus fully exposing the short-sightedness if not

downright hypocrisy and wickedness of those who are intent on promoting

monoculture grains at the expense of far superior indigenous varieties.]

 

In any case, amaranth is not the only source of protein in India’s rich

biodiversity and cuisine. Our dals, (also pulses and legumes), a staple mixed

with rice as dal-chawal and with wheat as dal-roti are also very rich in protein

(see Table 2). The consumption of dals also provides much higher levels of

proteins than GM potatoes.

 

Poor Indian children will get a full balanced diet in dals, pulses and amaranth,

instead of getting malnutrition on " protein rich " GM potatoes.

 

 

Table 2. Protein content of some Indian pulses

--

Pulses | Protein per 100 gm

Bengal gram (whole) | 17.1 gm

Horse gram | 22.0 gm

Bengal gram roasted | 22.5 gm

Lentil | 25.1 gm

Black gram | 24.0 gm

Moth bean | 23.6 gm

Cow pea | 24.1 gm

Peas dry | 19.7 gm

Field Bean | 24.9 gm

Rajma | 22.9 gm

Green gram dal | 24.5 gm

Redgram | 22.3 gm

 

 

===================================================

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telephone: [44 20 8643 0681] [44 20 7383 3376] [44 20 7272 5636]

 

General Enquiries sam

Website/Mailing List press-release

ISIS Director m.w.ho

 

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