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GMW:_Busy_exploiting_hunger

" GM_WATCH "

Fri, 2 Jan 2004 09:10:49 GMT

 

GM WATCH daily

http://www.gmwatch.org

---

To mark the beginning of 2004, here's one of the best articles of 2003 - from

Devinder Sharma, c/o the excellent India Together website (more of their GM

coverage can be found here: http://www.indiatogether.org/agriculture/gegm.htm)

---

Busy exploiting hunger

India Together, December 2003

http://www.indiatogether.org/2003/dec/dsh-hunger.htm

 

Around the developed world, GM crops are discredited, but in India, under the

emotional tag of 'eradicating hunger', the industry is having a free run, says

Devinder Sharma.

 

 

In the past four months, hundreds of farmers in Karnataka, ironically the hub of

GM industry, have taken their lives to escape the pangs of hunger and the

growing humiliation that comes along with crop failures. Unable to understand

the ground realities, the Karnataka government has been thinking of sending

psychiatrists to talk to farmers. Andhra Pradesh too had followed this misplaced

vision.

 

 

At the same time, in the past few months - and for that matter a trend that

continues from a couple of years - a few educated entrepreneurs in the

Karnataka's capital, Bangalore, have suddenly become the darling of the

state exchequer. Many foreign companies, most of them unable to operate in the

hostile environment against GM crops in the west, have moved shop to

Bangalore. Invariably, they all come with the promise of higher crop yields,

nutritional crops, and with the underlying thrust on eradicating hunger.

 

 

It isn't therefore surprising to see Bangalore hosting five-star conclaves

every month or so in the name of fighting hunger. None of the delegates, and I

repeat, none of them have ever stepped out of the hotels to even visit and meet

the families of those who laid down their lives essentially to sustain flawed

policies, including the misplaced emphasis on crop biotechnology.

 

 

The biotech epidemic has now spread wide. Karnataka is not the only state to

have doled out state largesse to a handful of industrialists and business

houses. If the recent surveys and reports in BioSpectrum are any indication,

many other state governments are queuing up with red carpets. Isn't it

surprising that the same politicians who were once despised by the

industrialists have now become their comrades in arms? Isn't it surprising that

the same elite class that once blamed the 'politician-engineer-contractor' nexus

for siphoning off the state funds, is now merrily part of the new age trio that

comprises the 'politician-industry-scientist'?

 

 

Industrialists are not alone. Let us examine the dubious role of agricultural

scientists, part of the new age tribe. " When was the last time you had organised

a national conference on farmers suicides? " I asked a group of distinguished

agricultural scientists participating in a recent national seminar on the need

for a strong regulatory mechanism for GM crops at the Indian Agricultural

Research Institute, New Delhi. " When was the last time you had organized a

meeting on the shameful paradox of plenty that continues to plague the country -

millions living in abject hunger while the mountains of foodgrains rot in the

open? "

 

The resulting silence was deafening.

 

In 2002-03, nearly 17 million tonnes from the unmanageable food surplus has been

diverted for exports, and that too at a price that was actually meant for people

living below the poverty line. Another six million tones were released for the

trade at the same price. A year back, the country had a staggering food surplus

of 62 million tones, stacked in the open and facing

the vagaries of the weather. A report of the Standing Committee of Parliament

had estimated that the government was spending Rs 62,000 million

every year to maintain these food stocks. If every bag of grain in the godowns

was to be put in a row, it would stretch to the moon and back.

 

Agricultural scientists have refrained from debating this criminal apathy. GM

industry too has very conveniently ducked this uncomfortable question. Both have

instead joined hands to pry open whatever little that remains of the state

exchequer. Aided and abetted by the US Agency for International Development

(USAID), the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI), and

the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII), continue to organize

seminars/workshops/conferences in league with the National Academy of

Agricultural Sciences, Indian Council of Agricultural Research and the Tata

Energy Research Institute on topics like the role of biotechnology in fighting

hunger.

 

If hunger at the time of plenty is a crime, if fighting hunger was a national

priority, would not a more humanitarian task be addressed by coming out with

recommendations on how to utilize the rotting food surpluses, on how to make the

surplus food stocks reach those who need it most, on how to ensure that every

citizen in the country is well fed? Shouldn't the politician-industry-scientist

trio impress upon the government the folly of spending Rs 62,000 million in

storing the grains and not spending the same amount on its distribution?

Couldn't the industry come forward to help the nation fight the scourge? After

all, there is no shortage of food.

 

The hype that is being created through the gullible media is based more or less

on lies. The EU Environment Commisioner said " [GM crops] will solve starvation

among shareholders, but not the developing world unfortunately. "

 

Precious resources are instead being diverted from poverty and hunger

eradication to laying out an adequate regulatory mechanism (even if it is only

on paper) so to welcome the genetic engineering industry from the United States

and Europe - an industry, which is actually on the run. State governments are

making available prime land, massive resources and tax-holidays, hoping that the

sunrise industry will come to its rescue at the time of general elections.

Agricultural scientists, knowing that the state has no money to even pay the

monthly salaries, have found an alternate job opening to sustain their own

livelihood.

 

In the last few months, Monsanto, the torch bearer of the GM industry, has

pulled out of Europe; cut up to 9 per cent of its global workforce, reported a

$188 million loss; paid hundreds of millions of dollars in compensation to

20,000 residents of Anniston, Alabama; seen a big drop in share value and now

pulled out of Pharmaceutical Crops. In Britain, in what is seen as a major blow

to the industry, Bayer Crop Sciences, a key GM crop developer, has decided to

halt trials of genetically modified plants. Bayer was the last company carrying

out GM trials in the UK.

 

In recent months, more than 20,000 people in Britain had turned out in meetings

and 37,000 people had filled in questionnaires in response to a nation wide

debate, aptly called " GM Nation? " In an overwhelmingly clear verdict, 98 per

cent of them rejected the introduction of GM crops, a majority of them were in

fact hostile to the idea. In New Zealand, some 9,000 protestors had marched

through the streets of Auckland - some call it the biggest demonstration since

the Vietnam war - to show the government the groundswell of public opinion

against GM crops. Far away in Brazil, the state of Parana, which declared itself

a transgenics-free territory, has held some 800 trucks - some of them from

Paraguay - carrying genetically modified soy.

 

The biggest-ever scientific research trials, and that too carried by the British

government science agencies, have established what was widely known

and feared: GM crops do an irreparable damage to wildlife and biodiversity.

Cross-pollination between GM plants and their wild relatives is inevitable and

could create hybrid superweeds resistant to the most powerful herbicides. The

results of the research trials, which too were rigged, were so obvious that

scientists were actually unable to hide them any longer. Why I say rigged, is

because it subsequently became known that researchers had used a highly toxic

chemical on the non-GM maize crop, while the GM crop was treated just once with

another chemical, so allowing weeds and insects to thrive.

 

And two years later, after the controversy shrouding the contamination of maize

- one of the world's most important food crops -- in its centre of origin in

Mexico broke, the Mexican government (and also the scientific community) have

now acknowledged that Mexico's traditional maize crop is contaminated with DNA

from GM maize despite a government prohibition on the planting of GM seeds. The

contamination is more widespread than what was

earlier reported. Isn't it therefore worrying that despite the known facts, the

Department of Biotechnology has given a green signal for research on GM corn in

India?

 

The hype that is being created through the gullible media is based more or less

on lies. The Independent, London (Oct 12, 2003) screams: " Ministers knew of the

environmental dangers, but the tests were designed not to focus on this. " Wasn't

the same prescription followed for the tests on Bt cotton in India? And as

European Union Environment Commissioner, Margot Wallstrom,

said: " They tried to lie to people, they tried to force it upon people ...So I

hope they have definitely learned a lesson from it and especially when they now

try to argue that this will try to solve the problems of starvation in the

world. It will solve starvation among shareholders, but not the developing world

unfortunately. "

 

In India too, spearheaded by the Department of Biotechnology, a massive

disinformation campaign has been launched. The reason is simple: stakes are so

high that if India rejects the faulty technology there will be no safe

haven for the discredited industry. And India, which has traditionally accepted,

and that too with a lot of respect, almost all kinds of rubbish

from the western countries - be it cow dung, toxic wastes, obsolete industrial

technology, sub-standard automobiles, cattle feed in the name of

food commodities, no eyebrows are raised in accepting an unwanted technology,

which comes with the more acceptable and emotional tag of removing hunger.

 

In reality, neither the politicians, nor the industry and not even the

agricultural scientists are actually interested anymore in fighting hunger.

Under such circumstances, more and more state governments will follow the trend

initiated by Andhra Pradesh -- build up a cadre of psychiatrists to advise

farmers not to commit suicide.

 

Devinder Sharma

December 2003

 

Devinder Sharma is a food and trade policy analyst. He also chairs the New

Delhi-based Forum for Biotechnology & Food Security. Among his recent works

include two books 'GATT to WTO: Seeds of Despair' and 'In the Famine Trap'.

 

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