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WEEKLY_WATCH_NUMBER_56

" GM_WATCH "

Fri, 23 Jan 2004 09:46:24 GMT

 

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

THE WEEKLY WATCH NUMBER 56

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from Claire Robinson, WEEKLY WATCH editor

---------------------------

Dear all

 

Welcome to WW56 bringing you all the latest news in brief on the GM issue.

 

It's depressing that UK PM Blair seems intent on allowing commercialisation of

GM maize in this country, even if it is for only one season (HIGHLIGHTS) -

especially as his action appears to be motivated by a desire to save face.

 

Many of us are concerned also about the EU lifting its moratorium on GM crop

acceptance. But the EU's move could backfire on the US, as EU tracing and

labelling rules require the US to do something it seemingly finds impossible:

identify which GM traits are in which crops and where they are going! The

Americans say these rules are more of a trade barrier to GMOs than the

moratorium, so let's raise a half-hearted cheer for Brussels red tape.

 

Claire

http://www.gmwatch.org/

 

---------------------------

CONTENTS

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NEW FROM GM WATCH: BEHIND THE HEADLINES

HYPE OF THE WEEK

SETBACKS TO THE GM LOBBY

OTHER HIGHLIGHTS OF THE WEEK

INTERVIEW OF THE WEEK: DEVINDER SHARMA AT THE WORLD SOCIAL FORUM, MUMBAI, INDIA

THOUGHT FOR THE WEEK

HEADLINES OF THE WEEK

SUBSCRIPTIONS

 

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NEW FROM GM WATCH: BEHIND THE HEADLINES

-------

 

We've just launched a new section on the GM Watch website that looks behind the

stories in the news - go to this page for all the accompanying links for each

item:

http://www.gmwatch.org/p1temp.asp?pid=28 & page=1

 

Here's a taster:

 

January 2004

 

20th: 'Eco-imperialism' in New York - exploiting the poor for corporate purposes

A conference that its organisers say will make 'eco-imperialism' a household

word is taking place at the Sheraton Hotel, New York, today. Opposition to GM

crops, its organisers claim is part of a 'war' against the poor in the

developing world. But those organisers have been called 'a tin cup outstretched

to every Hard Right political campaign or cause that finds it convenient - or a

sick joke - to hire Black cheerleaders'. Find out more about those behind the

event, and how they are using " experts " like Prof CS Prakash, Patrick Moore,

Roger Bate, Niger Innis and Paul Dreussen who seem far more interested in

defending corporate interests than those of the poor.

 

------

HYPE OF THE WEEK: Indian journalist exposes GM cotton hype

------

AREA UNDER BT COTTON NEGLIGIBLE, SAYS AGRICULTURE MINISTRY

The Times of India recently reported that " India [is] a key GM crop cultivator " ,

saying India has made it to the list of top ten transgenic crop-growing nations

by doubling its (GM) Bt cotton cultivation. But now an article in India's

Financial Express by Ashok B. Sharma has revealed thhat if India is " a key GM

crop cultivator " , then the biotech industry is in dire trouble.

 

Sharma's article draws on a leaked internal report of the Indian government

which says the area under cultivation with India's first transgenic crop, Bt

cotton, is actually miniscule compared to the total area given over to cotton.

The report also says this shows the unpopularity of the GM crop with India's

farmers.

 

" In 2002-03, the first year of its approval for commercial cultivation, Bt

cotton covered an area of only 38,038 hectare area representing 0.51 per cent of

the area under cotton in the period. In 2003-04 with good monsoon rains the area

under Bt cotton increased to 92,000 hectare. This area coverage under Bt cotton

is almost negligible as compared to over 9 million hectare under cotton crop in

the country. This points to the low acceptability of Bt cotton by farmers " , says

the internal report of the Union agriculture ministry.

 

The agriculture ministry's findings undermine the hype created by the US-based

International Service for the Aquisition of Agri-biotech Association (ISAAA),

which gave rise to stories like that in the Times of India, and similar hyped

claims all around the world. The ISAAA in its study claimed that the Bt cotton

area in India has increased to 100,000 hectare in 2003-04, as against the

government figure of 92,000 hectare. The ISAAA Southeast Asia director, Dr Randy

Hauteau, refused to answer questions about the methodology for arriving at such

a conclusion and the source of the data generated. The ISAAA also failed to put

its figures into context, implying instead that they were an indication of the

massive success of Bt cotton in India.

 

The latest evidence of ISAAA hype follows on from a report by Aaron deGrassi of

the Institute of Development Studies, at the University of Sussex, which showed

that ISAAA's claims on the area under GM cotton cultivation in South Africa were

20-30 times higher than other reports, even those from industry sources.

 

ISAAA's annual reports generate massive uncritical media coverage right around

the globe about the growing success of GM crops. Type in " ISAAA " into Google and

it will generate over 14,000 items – many with headlines like " ISAAA forecasts

700% growth in GE crop market " . Its reports and figures are also often referred

to and quoted by governments and other expert groups.

 

ISAAA receives funding from Bayer CropScience, Monsanto, Syngenta, and Pioneer

Hi-Bred. ISAAA's multi-million dollar budget is matched by high-profile board

members, past and present, such as Monsanto's Robert Fraley, Wally Beversdorf of

Syngenta, and Gabrielle Persley, Executive Director of AusBiotech Alliance and

advisor to the World Bank. ISAAA has no representatives, however, from farmer

organizations in the very areas like Africa that it claims it is there to help.

 

For the Financial Express article:

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=2299

For a profile of ISAAA:

http://www.gmwatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=66

 

------

SETBACKS TO THE GM LOBBY

------

 

+ US EXPECTS NEW EU BIOTECH LAWS TO FURTHER DAMPEN AG TRADE

Regardless of whether some EU governments are inching forward on GM crop

acceptance, for the US the economic headache that GM crops represent is only set

to get worse.

 

As the EU prepares to launch new laws in April to label and track all GM food,

US farmers and government officials are warning they may turn out to be stronger

trade barriers than the biotech approval ban they are intended to replace. Only

nine biotech agriculture commodity varieties had been cleared for consumption by

the EU when it shut down the approval process in 1998. That, according to US

Trade Representative Robert Zoellick, has cost U.S. exporters " a few hundred

million dollars...a year " in corn sales alone. The US, in comparison, has

approved more than 50, according to the Biotechnology Industry Organization.

 

The EU has promised the US for years it would lift its ban on new biotech crops

so long as labelling and record-keeping regulations could be implemented. But

trade and biotech counsellor for the USDA David Hegwood said the regulations may

be impossible to comply with: " What's not clear about this regulation is whether

it's going to require exporters to identify the specific (biotech traits) in a

corn shipment. We've got know way of knowing. We don't know how we're going to

deal with that. "

 

The US's problems stem from a determination to deny choice to the consumer, as

an USDA official makes clear, " Labeling is a problem for us primarily because

the food companies have said they don't want to label their brand name products

because they think consumers won't buy them if they do. We have no reason to

doubt that would be the case. "

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=2293

 

Funny that US GM-pushers claim to be so sure that GM foods haven't caused so

much as a headache. How would they know, if they haven't a clue which GM traits

are in exported foods or where they're going?

 

+ MONSANTO EXITS ARGENTINA SOY BIZ

Monsanto has stopped selling soybean seeds in Argentina, the world's no. 3

producer (after the US and Brazil), because it can't make a buck. The company

pushed its way into the market with cut price GM seed but now says a huge black

market for the seeds is making it impossible to recoup its investments. Many

suspect Monsanto is trying to arm-twist the Argentine government into exerting

more control over farmers in Monsanto's interest.

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=2301

 

+ GM INCREASING PESTICIDE USE - NON-GM DOING THE OPPOSITE

In a letter to the press, Canadian agronomist Dr Bert Christie draws attention

to how Dr Charles Benbrook's recent study demolishes the constantly repeated

claim that GM crops reduce pesticide use, showing the opposite is the case in

the longer term. Revealingly, he also notes: " Dr. Benbrook's study also points

out the often ignored fact that growers of conventional (non-GM) crops are

reducing the use of chemicals substantially, without turning to GM technology. "

He comments: " The decline in the use of chemicals on non-GM corn was attributed

to the desire of farmers to reduce chemical dependency coupled with the use of

other practices to control weeds; chemical and non-chemical. "

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=2397

 

+ GENES RUN WILD - NEW NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL REPORT

A report commissioned by the US Dept of Agriculture from the National Research

Council warns that bio-containment is just not possible and that there are

serious ecological risks posed by some GM plants, insects, microbes and animals.

It says there is no completely effective way to prevent some introduced genes

from running out of control in the wild. [see video at

http://www.sciencentral.com/articles/view.php3?language=english & type=article

& article_id=218392157]

 

The report, " Biological Confinement of Genetically Modified Organisms, "

recommends that regulatory agencies require, and enforce, what it calls

" bioconfinement " on a case-by-case basis. It says, " the evaluation of whether

and how to confine a GEO should be an integral part of its development, and the

need for bioconfinement should be considered early in the process. "

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=2374

 

+ NEW ZEALAND: ANTI-GM TROOPS SET FOR ACTION

Anti-GM activists in New Zealand have vowed to de-contaminate any GM crops grown

after the expiry last year of the moratorium on GM plantings. Lenka Rochford of

the People's Moratorium Enforcement Agency - one of the newer groups which

advocate direct action - articulates the frustration that has led for calls to

take the anti-GM campaign to a new level: " We've done petitions. We've done

submissions. We've written letters to the editor. We've even got naked on

Parliament Grounds. We've done it all, and nobody's listening. [Direct action]

is all we've got left. "

 

PMEA is running training sessions on direct action techniques. One attendee,

Penny Bright of Auckland, said, " When injustice becomes law, resistance becomes

duty. If you plant it [GM crops], we'll pull it. "

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=2297

 

+ SCHMEISER VS MONSANTO: TEST CASE FOR GM PATENTS

Canada's Supreme Court was cited as pointedly questioning lawyers for Monsanto

in a dispute with Saskatchewan canola grower Percy Schmeiser, whom Monsanto

previously successfully sued for infringing its GM Roundup Ready seed patent

when GM contamination showed up in his soy crop.

 

The outcome of this case will determine whether GM patents on crops are legally

recognised in Canada; whether farmers can continue the age-old practice of

saving seeds; and if farmers are liable for patent infringement if their crop is

contaminated with GM traits.

 

Schmeiser's lawyer was cited as arguing that in light of another court ruling

refusing to patent " a higher life form " - a GM mouse created by Harvard

University - Monsanto's patent on the engineered gene in canola does not give it

ownership of the entire plant.

 

Robert Hughes, Monsanto's lawyer, argued that the company wasn't seeking a

patent on the entire canola plant, but rather an " ingredient " of the plant,

likening the company's patent to that of an inventor who develops a new kind of

steel for automobiles and receives a patent for that component rather than the

whole car. But Supreme Court Justice Louise Arbour was quoted as saying,

" According to the Harvard Mouse ruling, I don't think the steel analogy works. "

 

Justice Ian Binnie also appeared sceptical of the damages awarded to Monsanto

against Schmeiser, asking what additional profit Schmeiser made with Monsanto's

seeds than conventional seeds if Schmeiser, as he has testified, didn't spray

the company's herbicide.

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=2372

 

Read Dr Vandana Shiva on the Schmeiser case: " Percy's future is our future "

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=2375

 

Excerpt:

" Poor peasants of the South cannot survive seed monopolies. That is why the case

of Percy Schmeiser will decide the fate not just of one Canadian farmer but

billions of peasants. The unjust and unethical case brought by Monsanto against

Percy is a double crime against farmers. Firstly by creating and enforcing

illegitimate patent rights to seed, it robs us of our human right and human duty

to be seed savers. Secondly, it rewards the polluter with enhanced property

rights and profits. The principle of 'polluter pays' has been transformed into

'polluter gets paid'.

 

" This perverse jurisprudence must be corrected for the sake of all farmers, and

all species. Farmers' freedoms must come before corporate monopolies. Farmers'

survival must come before corporate greed. Percy's future is our future. "

 

---------------------------

OTHER HIGHLIGHTS OF THE WEEK

---------------------------

 

+ UK MINISTERS TO APPROVE COMMERCIAL GROWTH OF GM CROPS NEXT MONTH...

The government will next month approve the commercial growing of GM crops in

Britain for the first time. But ministers claim they will impose strict

conditions on the cultivation of GM maize and ban commercial GM sugar beet and

oilseed rape after trials showed that they could be more damaging to the

environment than conventional crops. The decision to go ahead follows this

week's recommendations by the Advisory Committee on Releases to the Environment

(ACRE).

 

Farmers are unlikely to be able to go ahead before 2005 and will be subject to

similar restrictions to those governing the trials, which specify the type of

herbicide and the variety of GM seed they can use, and the type of plants they

can grow in neighbouring fields.

 

Michael Meacher, the former environment minister, said that questions over

health risks had still to be resolved. He said: " I do not believe the government

has a mandate to proceed with the commercialisation of any GM crop. "

 

Pete Riley, a senior GM campaigner for Friends of the Earth, claimed that low

demand from consumers would leave few farmers prepared to invest in the new

technology.

 

A spokeswoman for the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds also called for

more research. Norman Baker, the Liberal Democrat environment spokesman, said:

" It seems the only time the Government wants to do something on the environment

is when it wants to damage it. " But government sources believe the restrictions

will be so tight that many farmers will be put off planting the first GM

commercial crops in the UK.

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=2292

 

+ ... BUT GM CORN WILL BE APPROVED FOR ONE YEAR ONLY

GM maize will be given the go-ahead for a single season in Britain, in a move

largely crafted to save the Prime Minister's face, according to a story in The

Independent on Sunday. The Government is preparing a very limited approval for

just one crop, GM maize, which will effectively mean that it will only be able

to be grown in 2005 and then under strict conditions that may make it

uneconomic.

 

The plan, which will be announced next month, is designed to save Tony Blair

from abandoning the technology, while placating public outrage by ensuring that

few GM crops are planted in British soil.

 

After the first crop of GM maize, atrazine, the pesticide used on conventional

maize, will be banned under EU rules. The chemical, which effectively sterilises

the soil, is entirely responsible for the poor performance of the maize against

its GM counterpart in the official trials.

 

If it is to get permission for GM maize beyond 2006, the industry will have to

prove its case all over again with new studies, to show that growing its product

remains more beneficial than traditional cultivation even after atrazine has

been replaced. Ministers will insist that the GM maize is grown under the same

conditions as in the official trials. Critics say that conditions were designed

to give the modified crop the best possible environmental performance, making it

uneconomic in the real world.

 

Senior officials expect that there will be no market for GM maize, and believe

it will only be grown if biotech firms give farmers " offers they cannot refuse " .

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=2300

 

+ PRO-GM SCIENTISTS URGE BLAIR TO APPROVE BIOTECH CROPS

Just before the Blair government's announcement of commercialisation of GM

maize, 150 pro-GM scientists signed a letter to Tony Blair urging a

" science-based approach " to the country's policy on GM crops. It turns out that

means just one thing - unquestioning acceptance of faith-based claims such as

the following: " GM crops are providing farmers with cost-effective means of

controlling pests while using less pesticides and reducing the impact of

agriculture in the face of increasing environmental pressures. In reality, there

is overwhelming scientific evidence that this technology is a safe and useful

approach to improving agricultural production and environmental sustainability,

and contributes significantly to better health. " No references are given for

these claims.

 

Better health? That's particularly intriguing. We can only assume that the

scientists are referring to the robust condition of their wallets.

 

One signatory of the letter to Blair was Peter Raven.

 

+ FROM THE GMWATCH PROFILE OF PETER RAVEN

http://www.gmwatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=191 & page=R

Peter Raven is director of the Missouri Botanical Garden in St Louis. Raven is a

passionate advocate of " world sustainability " of the sort that has GM crops as

its central element. " There is nothing I'm condemning Monsanto for, " he says.

And he's praised the company's efforts to win public acceptance for GMOs, " The

company has... won many more believers around the world in what they're doing

and attempting to do. "

 

An old friend of Raven's, geneticist Wes Jackson, says of him, " I just wish

Peter was more reflective... The fact that living substance, germplasm, can

become the property of a corporation is going to come at a cost. I think the

boundaries of consideration need to be broader than Peter's willing to make

them. In a certain sense he's a paid traveling salesman for Monsanto " .

 

Raven has good reason to smile on the company. According to Time magazine, " When

Raven first came to the garden in 1971, he had 85 employees and a budget of

$650,000. Today there are 354 people on staff, and the budget is $20 million. "

That expansion has been assisted by millions from the U.S. Department of

Agriculture and substantial corporate support, not least from Monsanto.

 

The Garden, in fact, is based in Monsanto's home town of St Louis. According to

Raven there are other reasons for the strength of Monsanto's support. Although

" We don't do biotech work other than bioprospecting, " he says, " the basic

research we do here at the Garden makes us a major resource for the

biotechnology industry. " Raven, together with Monsanto, was also the driving

force behind a nearby plant biotech research institute on whose board he sits.

 

The Raven-Monsanto equation includes the Garden's multimillion-dollar research

centre - The Monsanto Center. And it doesn't stop there: the St Louis paper, The

Riverside Times, noted in 1999, " The Garden received $3 million from Monsanto in

their last fundraising campaign... Monsanto also contributed land and a large

chunk of the $146 million startup money for the Danforth Plant Science Center [a

project Raven was instrumental in getting off the ground]. Monsanto matches its

employees' contributions to the Garden ($225,000 last year) and contributes to

the operating fund ($25,000 last year). Trustees give privately, too, and in

past years the Garden has had Monsanto CEO Robert Shapiro, Monsanto vice

president Tom K. Smith and Monsanto research-and-development director Howard

Schneiderman on its governing board. Now the Garden is collaborating with

Monsanto's nutrition sector on a food library, collecting samples of all plants

used worldwide as foods and medicines. (The World

Resources Institute lists Monsanto as a bioprospector since 1989 and lists its

collector, as of 1993, as the Missouri Botanical Garden.) When Confluence, an

environmental quarterly, criticized Monsanto, the Garden's PR woman pulled it

from their literature table. "

 

At the time that was written, Raven's wife was Monsanto's Director of Public

Policy, Kate Fish, leading to jokes that even Raven's sex life came

corporate-sponsored.

 

Not without reason did one scientist say, " Raven glows with conflict of interest

from his perch in St Louis. "

 

+ FROM GMWATCH'S BEHIND THE HEADLINES

http://www.gmwatch.org/p1temp.asp?pid=28 & page=1

As Britain's Labour government prepares to approve, at least temporarily, the

first commercial GM crop in the UK to save Tony Blair's face, find out more

about the GM connections of:

Lord Sainsbury - Blair's science minister and Labour's principal donor

http://www.gmwatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=116

David Hill - Blair's spin doctor-in-chief and Monsanto's PR man

http://www.gmwatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=177

Mike Craven - Labour's former spin doctor-in-chief who now helps direct the

industry's lobbying.

http://www.gmwatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=139

 

+ FIXING THE FARM SCALE TRIALS

The farm scale trials were designed to see if the herbicide management regime

used with GM crops damaged wildlife less than the regime used with conventional

crops. GM maize has been given the go-ahead for commercialisation because the GM

crop supposedly allowed more wildlife (weeds) to survive than the conventional

crop. So here's an interesting quote: " Critics ... claimed that the non-GM crops

was sprayed several times with Atrazine while the GM crop was sprayed with

herbicide just once at the start of the season - and farmers alarmed at the

growth of weeds were told not to spray a second time. " - Steve Dube, " Cardiff

and London in GM crops row " , The Western Mail, Jan 17 2004. No wonder the trials

carefully avoided measuring yield!

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=2296

 

+ CARDIFF AND LONDON IN GM CROPS ROW

A confrontation is looming between the Welsh and UK governments over whether to

allow GM maize to be grown in Britain. The prospect of open disagreement looks

more likely following approval by the government's advisers, The Advisory

Committee on Releases to the Environment (ACRE). ACRE advised UK Environment

Secretary Margaret Beckett that farmers could grow GM maize under strict rules

without adverse effects on wildlife.

 

UK Environment Minister Elliott Morley told MPs there was a strong case for

growing the GM maize because trials showed it was less damaging than a

conventional crop. But Wales Countryside Minister Carwyn Jones said the ACRE

advice supported the National Assembly's opposition to GM crops.

 

National Assembly Member Mick Bates, the Welsh Liberal Democrat environment

spokesman, drew attention to the experience in Canada, where genetic

modifications have spread to organic and conventional crops and into the wider

environment with devastating results. " [uK environment minister] Elliot Morley

and Tony Blair want to assess each application to grow commercial GM crops on a

'case-by-case basis', " said Mr Bates. " But that cannot be allowed to happen in

Wales, not with a population which is so opposed to any re-run here of the

Canadian example. "

 

Plaid Cymru environment spokesman Simon Thomas said, " Today's advice from ACRE

gives the Government all the legal basis it needs to reject GM maize, beet and

spring oil seed rape. "

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=2296

 

+ AFRICA: DUMPING GROUND FOR REJECTED GM WHEAT

The African Centre for Biosafety (ACB) has revealed that Monsanto plans to

" dump " in South Africa what no one else wants - GE wheat. On 19 January 2004,

Monsanto announced that it had approached the South African government for

permission to import its GE Roundup Ready wheat, from the US or Canada, in an

obvious pre-emptive bid to create a much needed market for its GE wheat, because

none exists anywhere in the world.

 

GE wheat is not grown commercially anywhere, including the US and Canada.

Monsanto is struggling to obtain commercial approval in the US and Canada,

because of technical difficulties in the genetic transformation of wheat and

massive rejection by consumers and farmers in those countries. In May 2003, the

Canadian Wheat Board (CWB), a farmer-controlled grain marketing agency, called

on Monsanto Canada to withdraw its application for an environmental safety

assessment of the GM wheat and put the interests of consumers first.

 

Monsanto's application also comes at a time of widespread rejection by the major

wheat importers throughout the world, including in Africa. Importers from

Algeria, Egypt, the European Union, Japan Korea, the Philippines, Indonesia and

Malaysia have unequivocally and repeatedly stated that they would not accept GE

wheat. The senior managing director of the Japanese Flour Millers Association,

comprising 36 large flour millers who have more than 90% of the total wheat

market in Japan, stated his position clearly:

 

" Under the circumstances, I strongly doubt that any bakery and noodle products

made from genetically modified wheat or even conventional wheat that may contain

genetically modified wheat will be accepted in the Japanese market. World wheat

supply has been abundant in recent years, and I don't see why we have to deal

with modified wheat... I believe the production of modified wheat at this time

will be a very risky challenge for US producers. "

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=2373

 

+ GM GIANTS PIN HOPES ON AFRICA

African countries are coming under increasing pressure from international seed

companies to embrace GM foods, say South Africa's anti-GM lobby. " Africa is the

last chance for the GM seed companies and that's why they're pushing so hard.

The European market has closed for these companies - as we've seen with Monsanto

pulling out of the European cereal market - so they are looking to Africa, " says

Glenn Ashton of SAFeAGE (South African Freeze Alliance for Genetic Engineering).

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=2399

 

+ THE GM LOBBYISTS IN SOUTH AFRICA - IDENTIFIED

GM lobbyists pushing GM into South Africa are profiled in our directory, The

Biotech Brigade. They include Monsanto's favourite farmer, TJ Buthelezi (profile

at

http://www.gmwatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=184 & page=B )

and AfricaBio (profile at

http://www.gmwatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=170 & page=A )

- an industry lobby group part-funded by Monsanto.

 

+ GREECE: GM COTTON UNCHECKED

Despite the official ban on cultivating GM crops in Greece, independent testing

found high quantities of GM cotton in this year's output, Greenpeace said.

Greenpeace activists mounted a protest outside the Agriculture Ministry in

Athens, urging the government to seize all this year's cotton crop and conduct

wide-ranging tests for GM pollution.

 

" We found that GM seeds have been imported and sown, while the plants have been

harvested, " Greenpeace spokeswoman Myrto Pispini said. " These seeds were not

caught by the official testing system. " Greenpeace tests found that six out of

seven samples of cotton seed and kernels - used for animal fodder - from cotton

mills in central Greece " contained alien genetic material. "

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=2290

 

+ COLOMBIA: CONTROVERSY AS GM CROPS GET GREEN LIGHT

Controversy is growing in Colombia over the government's decision to go ahead

with the commercial cultivation of GM cotton. Colombian farmers have already

planted 6,500 hectares of commercial Bt cotton in the north of the country. The

government also plans to allow the planting of GM crops, such as maize, in other

regions of the country.

 

But the government's move has been criticised by environmental groups, who argue

that GM crops should not be planted without an 'environmental licence' - a

certificate issued by the environment ministry authorising projects that may

affect biodiversity, such as new roads and various industrial and agricultural

activities.

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=2290

 

-------

INTERVIEW OF THE WEEK

-------

 

+ DEVINDER SHARMA AT THE WORLD SOCIAL FORUM, MUMBAI, INDIA

In the following interview excerpt, Devinder Sharma lays bare the real agenda

behind the WTO (World Trade Organisation) and OECD (Organisation for Economic

Cooperation and Development) programmes: not eradicating hunger but making the

developed countries the food producers and the developing countries the food

consumers:

 

Q [reporter]: ... where do you think the process of economic liberalisation and

free trade in agriculture is headed?

 

A [Devinder]: To me, the basic objective of the entire globalisation process -

and the WTO is part of it - is to destroy the inherent capability of the poor

and developing countries, which as you know constitutes the majority world, to

produce food from within the country. It aims at taking away food security and

letting the markets dictate who should eat what, if at all.

 

The Agreement on Agriculture, coupled with TRIPs, sanitary measures, and foreign

direct investment, are all aimed at limiting the role of developing countries in

food production. With the Third World forced to remove trade barriers and QRs

(quantitative restrictions), and with the OECD multiplying agricultural

subsidies for its own farmers, the game is very clear. The developing countries

should refrain from producing food and that can be only done if they are made to

diversify to cash crops - thereby destroy the natural farming systems. And in

turn, these countries should import cheaper and high-quality food from the west.

 

Q: You mean the OECD will be the world's only food bowl?

 

A: Yes, you got it right. The world is being very conveniently divided into two

parts: the OECD countries as the food providers and the rest of the world as

food receiver.

 

The process to ensure that staple foods are produced only in North America and

Europe (and to some extent in Australia) was actually initiated more than a

decade ago. The World Bank/IMF have always, as part of the loan

conditionalities, asked the developing countries to diversify the cropping

pattern from staple foods to cash crops - crops like strawberries, cut flowers,

melons, tomato, saying that such a shift will bring more income to farmers.

 

....If the public money being incurred on GM crops research, regulation and

promotion - in the name of eradicating hunger and malnutrition - were to be

diverted to feed the hungry, the FAO can meet its target of reducing global

hunger by half and that too at least 12 years before the internationally

accepted deadline of the year 2015. That would mean saving the lives of around

24,000 people a day who die from hunger and related ailments.

 

.... The message that the WSF is trying to convey is that the globe is not a

football to be tossed around by a few multinational conglomerates and that

another world - where peace, equality and food security prevail - is possible.

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=2396

 

-------

CLAIRE'S THOUGHT FOR THE WEEK

-------

 

Keeping an ear trained on the media over the past few weeks has been an

uplifting experience for all except the genetic determinists, who believe that

our genes decide what diseases we suffer from. This discredited dogma, which

assumes that one gene confers one trait, underlies the entire GM industry.

 

The BBC's programme on Joseph Merrick, the " Elephant Man " , who suffered from

extreme deformities, was a potential showcase for the determinists. The

programme makers had traced a descendant of Merrick and assembled a research

team to " take DNA samples from her and, using the latest genetic techniques, try

to diagnose what condition caused his deformities... Many of the conditions that

could have caused the disfigurements can now be determined by DNA testing. "

 

It was clear that some heritable disease trait was being passed along this

family line. The descendant had a bony growth on her forehead in the same place

as one of Joseph's major growths; and many members of the family had had cancer.

Throughout the programme, we were repeatedly told that a certain gene mutation

could cause the condition that Joseph Merrick had.

 

The scientists obtained DNA from Joseph Merrick's descendant, and from many of

her relatives. They tested for the gene mutation, and found... nothing. The

genes were normal. Then they tested DNA from the skull of Merrick himself, and

found... nothing.

 

Oddly, no mention was made of this miserable failure on the part of genetic

determinism. All the tested family members were told they had nothing to worry

about because they didn't have the gene mutation. This was a bizarre conclusion,

because of the obvious problem of cancers and growths, which was acknowledged by

the family members. In what appeared to be a desperate attempt to salvage some

kudos for genetic science, the programme's message was twisted at the end into a

eulogy of the research leader for her extraordinary feat in salvaging intact DNA

from Merrick's ancient remains.

 

I don't mean to detract from these scientists' skills and achievements. They did

what they were asked to do, to perfection. But I can't help thinking that if

geneticists can't find any answers to the problem of heritable disease in the

Merrick family genes, they won't find them in anyone else's, either.

 

So is heredity more than just genes? I'm sure that question will be answered,

and soon. Watch this space.

 

" You need to know more than gene products in order to explain the emergence of

shape and form in organisms. You actually need a theory, a theory that involves

physics, chemistry, forces and spatial organization. You can have complete

details about genes and you are not going to be able to explain how development

occurs. So I think that is the fundamental test. When Darwinists say to me

'genes are enough', I say 'Show me.' " - Prof Brian Goodwin

http://ngin.tripod.com/article8.htm

 

-------

HEADLINES OF THE WEEK: from the GMWATCH archive

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive.asp

-------

22/1/2004 GM giants pin hopes on Africa

22/1/2004 GM increasing pesticide use - non-GM doing the opposite

22/1/2004 More on GM in South Africa - the lobbyists

21/1/2004 Africa: Dumping ground for rejected GM wheat

21/1/2004 Behind the headlines

21/1/2004 Monsanto's lawyers rebuffed in Schmeiser case

20/1/2004 Genes Run Wild says New Report from U.S.'s National Research Council

20/1/2004 Percy's Future is Our Future / Canadian farmer stands up against

Monsanto

19/1/2004 ISAAA hyped GM cotton figures for India

19/1/2004 Monsanto exits Argentina soy biz - it can't make a buck

18/1/2004 Saving Blair's face - GM corn to be approved for one year only

17/1/2004 Anti-GM troops set for action

17/1/2004 Fate of biodiversity rests on Canadian farmer's court challenge vs.

Monsanto

17/1/2004 Tony Blair must listen on GM / Cardiff and London in GM crops row

17/1/2004 U.S. Expects New EU Laws To Increase Its Losses

16/1/2004 Controversy in Greece and Colombia

16/1/2004 Ministers to approve commercial growth of GM crops next month

16/1/2004 THE WEEKLY WATCH number 55

 

FOR THE COMPLETE GMWATCH ARCHIVE: http://www.gmwatch.org/archive.asp

 

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