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> WEEKLY_WATCH_86

> " GM_WATCH " <info

> Thu, 19 Aug 2004 23:26:43 +0100

>

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

> WEEKLY WATCH number 86

>

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

> from Claire Robinson, WEEKLY WATCH editor

>

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

>

> The biotech industry has been indulging in its usual

> shadow-play, issuing plugs for GM for India that

> appear to emanate from India itself, but which on

> closer examination turn out to come from everywhere

> but! (FOCUS ON ASIA)

>

> It's also invented yet another " grassroots " front

> group, this time in France (LOBBYWATCH).

>

> Don't miss an important counter-event to the big

> biotech bash coming up in September in Cologne,

> Germany (EURO-NEWS).

>

> Claire claire

> www.lobbywatch.org / www.gmwatch.org

>

>

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

> CONTENTS

>

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

> LOBBYWATCH

> FOCUS ON ASIA

> FOCUS ON AFRICA

> EURO-NEWS

> AUSTRALIA

> THE AMERICAS

> CAMPAIGN OF THE WEEK - UK

> DONATIONS

>

>

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

> LOBBYWATCH

>

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

>

> + BIOTECH'S " RADICAL RURAL CAMPAIGNERS "

> An article in The Independent (UK) refers to " the

> surprise emergence in France of a group of radical

> rural campaigners claiming to be in favour of

> open-field [GM] experiments " .

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4239

>

> They recently turned up ready for a fist fight at

> Loiret in France when about 160 anti-GM activists

> took part in decontaminating a field of GM maize.

> (see EURO-NEWS below)

>

> So who are these " radical rural campaigners " with a

> taste for genetic contamination?

>

> According to the article, they're led by Pierre

> Pagesse, " a farmer and the managing director of the

> French biotechnology firm Biogemma " . Pagesse is also

> described as " president of Limagrain, a leading

> European seed company of which Biogemma is the

> research arm. "

>

> In terms of sales, Limagrain ranks as the 4th

> biggest seed company in the world, with only DuPont

> (Pioneer), Monsanto and Syngenta outselling it. Like

> those agrochemical giants, Limagrain has invested

> heavily in GM crop R & D and has undertaken GM field

> trials.

>

> In 1994 Limagrain took over the seed production

> assets of the French agrochemical giant

> Rhone-Poulenc, through an exchange of shares, which

> led to the creation of Limagrain Genetics

> International - 83% owned by Limagrain and 17% by

> Rhone-Poulenc. The two companies also developed

> common research programmes for developing GM crops

> within a joint venture.

>

> The biotech firm Biogemma was created by Limagrain

> in July 1997. In April 1998 RhoBio, a subsidiary

> common to Biogemma and Rhone-Poulenc was formed.

> RhoBio went on to become a joint venture with

> Aventis Crop Science and then Bayer Crop Science.

>

> According to a report on Limagrain's innovation

> strategy, " At the same time that it created

> Biogemma, Limagrain also made the strategic decision

> to concentrate on biotechnology and agro-industrial

> activities, and to dedicate *all its resources*

> towards this goal. " (emphasis added)

>

> In other words Limagrain bet its shirt on biotech.

> As the report notes: " biotechnology is one of the

> central themes for the company; and mastering

> biotechnology is seen as necessary if the group is

> to keep its identity and independence... resources,

> such as the company's capacity for research and

> development, are [therefore] earmarked for

> biotechnology. "

>

> The report identifies as a key challenge to this

> strategy: " the acceptability of GMOs " . It also notes

> that, " ironically " , investment in genomics " may

> provide a way to avoid transgenic methods altogether

> delivering it from the current controversy " .

> http://www.agbioforum.org/v4n1/v4n1a09-joly.htm

>

> Under the leadership of Pierre Pagesse, however,

> controversy, rather than being sidestepped, is being

> embraced!

>

> As Limagrain has farmers as shareholders and

> stakeholders, they may wish to consider the quality

> of Pagesse's strategic thinking and whether it isn't

> time for more intelligent leadership.

>

> Limagrain also owns the US-based company Biotechnica

> Agriculture. Limagrain Canada is owned by Monsanto.

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4239

>

>

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

> FOCUS ON ASIA

>

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

>

> + ISAAA CHIEF BACKS TERMINATOR IN INDIA!

> When confronted with the problem of

> cross-pollination of non-GM plants, the only

> solution Clive James, chairman of the

> industry-backed GM crop promotion body ISAAA, can

> offer is the Terminator! This, he complains, had had

> to be shelved at the behest of " the Greens " .

>

> James was speaking at the recent big pro-GM

> " International Conference on Agricultural

> Biotechnology: Ushering in the Second Green

> Revolution " conference in New Delhi.

>

> In fact, MS Swaminathan, a co-host with James of the

> conference, is among those who has denounced the

> technology: " In India where there are nearly 100

> million operational holdings, denial of plant-back

> rights or the use of the terminator mechanism will

> be disastrous from the socio-economic and

> biodiversity points of view, since over 80 percent

> of farmers plant their own farm-saved seeds. "

>

> Swaminathan is just one among many who have queued

> up to condemn Terminator genes. They included the

> FAO Director-General, Dr Jacques Diouf; Dr Gordon

> Conway, President of the Rockefeller Foundation; and

> The Consultative Group on International Agricultural

> Research. Not exactly a bunch of greens!

>

> For more on ISAAA:

> http://www.gmwatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=66 & page=I

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4237

>

> + MORE WIT AND WISDOM OF CLIVE JAMES

> At the New Delhi conference (see above), James

> supported the proposed " single window " for GM

> regulation in India. But he was forced to concede

> that even under the avidly pro-GM US regulatory

> system, no single window exists for GM regulation.

>

> James also said, Wambugu-style, that he's not saying

> GM crops are a silver bullet, it's just they're

> " essential " !

>

> Next, when cornered over the fact that poverty not

> production is the real problem underlying hunger in

> India - a country which regularly produces large

> surpluses of grain that go to rot because the poor

> can't afford them - James was left blithely

> claiming, " the transgenic technology can also solve

> the problem [ie poverty] by raising the income of

> the people " .

>

> How to support such a claim? Despite all the

> evidence to the contrary, James claims that GM

> cotton has been a success in India - this off the

> back of a discredited one-off survey carried out for

> Monsanto by the Nielson marketing agency!

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=3405

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4237

>

> + VANDANA SHIVA SAYS INDIA NEEDS STRONGER REGULATORY

> SYSTEM, NOT DEREGULATION

> Excerpt from an article in the Financial Express by

> Dr Vandana Shiva (GEAC is India's statutory body for

> GM crop assessment and approvals), in which she

> criticizes attempts to weaken India's GM regulatory

> system:

>

> Those of us who work for independent science,

> protection of environment and public health are

> calling for a " GEAC Plus " , aimed at strengthening

> regulation for biosafety by enhancing the capacities

> of the environment ministry in collaboration with

> the health and agriculture ministries. Strengthening

> regulation for biosafety is also required under the

> Cartagena Protocol. Industry however wants a " GEAC

> Minus " ; creating a fast track single window

> clearance to substitute GEAC.

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4234

>

> + GOLDEN RICE A DISTANT DREAM FOR INDIA

> An article in Business India says fears of

> environmental damage and food safety have held up

> India's plans to develop varieties of GM

> nutrition-enriched rice.

>

> " Products like salinity- and drought-tolerant rice

> varieties as well as the vitamin-A enriched Golden

> Rice have been developed but we are not getting the

> green signal to go ahead with field-testing, " said

> Swapan K. Datta of the Manila-based International

> Rice Research Institute (IRRI).

>

> Fears about food safety of GM agriculture products

> continue to be a major hurdle to solutions for

> problems like pests, salinity and drought, he

> contended. " The different kinds of rice being

> suggested for field testing are Golden Rice (named

> after its colour), pest resistant Bt rice, iron

> enriched rice and varieties of salinity tolerant and

> drought resistant rice, " Datta told IANS.

>

> He said permission for field-testing Golden Rice,

> which has a high level of vitamin A, has been sought

> in India, the US and the Philippines. " While the US

> has granted permission, it is still awaited in India

> and the Philippines, " Datta said.

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4227

>

> GM WATCH COMMENT: Note that the article describes GM

> rice as India's " dream " and as part of " India's

> plans " but most of the comment is derived from

> Swapan Datta, a plant biotechnologist at the

> International Rice Research Institute in the

> Philippines.

>

> Datta and the IRRI have been laying the foundations

> for releasing GM rice across Asia long before most

> people in India, or anywhere else in the world, had

> ever dreamt, let alone heard, of GM rice.

>

> The first work on GM rice was undertaken at IRRI as

> far back as 1990. By 1993 IRRI had begun " rice

> biotechnology training " courses for Asian

> scientists. The same year IRRI launched the Asian

> Rice Biotechnology Network (ARBN) and began its

> release of GM plants in greenhouses. By 1996 work on

> the genetic engineering of popular Asian cultivars

> was under way.

>

> IRRI is also part of the Consultative Group on

> International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), an

> association of public and private donor agencies

> that funds 16 international research centres.

>

> Swapan Datta is rice crop leader of the CGIAR's

> Challenge Program on Biofortification, which

> involves GM " nutrition enriched " plants - like

> Golden Rice.

>

> CGIAR has Syngenta Foundation on its board, while

> IRRI has over the years benefited from the support

> of such corporations as Monsanto, Union Carbide

> Asia, Bayer Philippines, Eli Lily, Occidental

> Chemical, Ciba Geigy (later part of Novartis Seeds

> which is now part of Syngenta), Chevron Chemical,

> Upjohn, Hoechst, and Cyanamid Far East.

>

> Far from being " India's dream " , Golden Rice was

> invented in the Swiss laboratory of Ingo Potrykus,

> and really gained momentum after Monsanto and

> Syngenta realised its immense PR potential. Monsanto

> man Gerard Barry then moved to IRRI to take control

> of the Golden Rice Network, overseeing the release

> of Golden Rice in Asia.

>

> Finally, notice the emphasis in the article on

> speed. Recurrent in the statements of GM promoters

> in India at the moment, as they strive to fix the

> regulatory system, is the need to " speed up the

> clearing process " for GM crops - all, doubtless, in

> the cause of more readily fulfilling " India's

> plans " and " India's dream " .

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4227

>

> + ICMR PROPOSES GENE TECHNOLOGY REGULATOR

> The Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) has

> proposed setting up of a National Gene Technology

> Regulator for ensuring safe applications and use of

> transgenic technology. It has suggested stringent

> norms for ensuring health safety and has proposed

> vesting of more powers with the health ministry and

> the agencies operating under it.

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4228

>

> A recent report from ICMR noted, " The safety of

> these components of the genetic construct is not

> clearly known as they have the potential to induce

> toxicity, transfer to gut flora or produce

> unintended effects leading to changes that are

> relevant from toxicological/nutritional perspective.

> Specific safety issues associated with GM foods

> include direct or indirect consequences of new gene

> product or altered levels of existing gene product

> due to GM, possibility of gene transfer from

> ingested GM food and potential adverse effect like

> allergenicity and toxic effects. "

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4177

>

> + SPOT THE CONNECTION: THE IRRI

> ***Last week MS Swaminathan was centre stage at a

> big pro-GM conference in New Delhi, which his

> Foundation helped organise.

> ***Also in action last week was Gurdev Khush as the

> lead signatory on a letter, authored by pro-GM

> lobbyist CS Prakash, attacking the Indian Council of

> Medical Research for expressing their concerns over

> the safety of GMOs.

> ***Over the weekend an article appeared in the

> Indian press highlighting the views of Swapan Datta

> (see above) on how India's " dream " of GM rice was

> being held up by regulatory hurdles

>

> What's the connection?

> ***Datta is a leading plant biotechnologist at the

> International Rice Research Institute (IRRI).

> ***MS Swaminathan is the fomer head of IRRI.

> ***During his 35 years with IRRI, Gurdev Khush was

> responsible for monocropping vast swathes of Asia

> with IRRI rice varieties.

> ***For more than a decade now IRRI has been laying

> the foundations for the release of GM rice across

> Asia.

> ***Swaminathan and Khush also actively promote GM

> crops on a global stage. Khush, for instance, is

> part of the 'scientific network' for 'product and

> technology innovation' and development at the

> controversial bio-pharmaceutical firm Ventria

> Bioscience - currently at the centre of the GM

> pharma rice controversies in California and

> elsewhere in the US.

>

> It would be a great mistake to underestimate the

> influence and reach of the International Rice

> Research Institute which has been working fior more

> than a decade to lay the foundations for the release

> of GM crops right across Asia.

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4233

> For a profile of IRRI:

> http://www.gmwatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=296

>

> + SECRETIVE DEAL-MAKING DEVASTATES LIVES

> Excerpts from an illuminating article by Ashwin

> Mahesh, co-founder of India Together

> (http://www.indiatogether.org/agriculture), about

> how agricultural decisions made in secret are

> killing Indians:

>

> ...we [india's middle class] have become so deluded

> by our minor privileged sphere that we are unable to

> comprehend what great numbers of Indians experience.

>

> The inattentiveness to agriculture has made it

> easier for policy decisions to be made that are

> catastrophically harmful to the rural poor.

>

> Hundreds of millions who depend on [agriculture] for

> their livelihood have no way of engaging the

> secretive deal-making that devastates their lives...

>

> Another example of the under-the-radar developments

> in agriculture is what's happening with genetically

> modified (GM) crops. These are plainly risky to

> public health, and the claims of improved nutrition

> from them are mostly unproven. Don't take my word

> for it; that's also what the Indian Council of

> Medical Research had to say about this recently.

>

> There's something else you should know about GM

> foods. The 'high-yielding strains' are touted as the

> answer to the world's problems of starvation and

> malnutrition. But how true is that? ...What is

> really being starved is the truth, while GM foods

> that are banned in many European countries are now

> being pushed in the Third World under the banner of

> benevolence.

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4229

>

>

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

> FOCUS ON AFRICA

>

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

>

> + BEWARE OF GM FOODS - TANZANIA VICE-PRESIDENT

> Africa should not be forced to accept GM foods,

> Tanzania's Vice-President Dr Ali Mohamed Shein said.

> He said African countries must give serious

> consideration to related consequences before

> accepting GM foods under the pretext of fighting

> hunger.

>

> Dr Shein made the remarks in Dar es Salaam when

> opening the Ninth Session of the Council of

> Ministers of the African Regional Industrial

> Property Organisation (Aripo).

>

> " If we want to ensure that our countries are not

> turned into experimental grounds, we need to develop

> and have the requisite capacity at both the national

> and regional levels. This will enable us to assess

> the safety of the genetically modified foods to the

> health of our people and to the protection of our

> environment, " he said.

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4236

>

> + TWELVE REASONS FOR AFRICA TO REJECT GM CROPS

> Zachary Makanya points out that Africa is in danger

> of becoming the dumping ground for the struggling GM

> industry and a laboratory for frustrated scientists.

> The proponents of GM

> technology sell a sweet message of GM crops bringing

> the second green revolution and the answer to

> African hunger, but a closer look makes it clear

> that GM crops have no place in African agriculture.

> Makanya gives twelve reasons

> why... Read on -

> http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=294

>

> Look out also for 'GM Sweet Potatoes: misspent

> millions'

> http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=294

>

> And see AUSTRALIA (below) for the latest hype and

> false claims of a leading South African regulator.

>

>

-------

> EURO-NEWS

>

-------

>

> + GM LOBBY MEETS IN COLOGNE

> From September 12-15 the Agricultural Biotechnology

> International Conference (ABIC 2004) will meet at

> Cologne's trade fair center. According to its own

> publicity, the ABIC is one of the " internationally

> most important conferences on biological and genetic

> technology " for " scientists, industry

> representatives, investors and politicians. " On the

> program: Philippe Busquien (EU Commissioner for

> Research), North Rhine-Westphalian Premier

> Steinbryck, Robert Zoellik (US trade representative

> - invited), and the 20 biggest agribusiness and food

> multinationals of the world: Monsanto, Nestle,

> Bayer, CropScience, Pioneer Europe, Syngenta and

> BASF.

> http://www.abic2004.org/index.html

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4231

>

> + PROTESTS AND COUNTER-CONFERENCE

> The better alternative: social justice and

> ecologically sound agriculture:

> On September 12-13 the lobbyists from industry,

> science and politics will have to reckon with those

> who are not impressed by their PR events and myths

> of progress. They are the countless critics of GE in

> farmer's organizations of the South and Europe, in

> consumer, environmental and church groups, and

> initiatives against the neoliberal world economic

> order.

>

> Protest Action: Monday, September 13, 2004, from

> 10:30 a.m. at the Cologne Fair: Critical

> organizations and initatives will make it clear that

> the high-tech solutions from the laboratories and

> corporate meetings are not wanted.

>

> Coordination: Regina Schwarz,

> Anti_ABIC_Aktion, Tel. 0221-37 31 02

> Alternative Conference 12 Sept. Maternushaus

> (Kardinal-Frings Str. 1-3) 15:00 - 20:00

>

> Speaking on global trade, genetically manipulated

> food and patents:

> Vandana Shiva (India, Research Foundation for

> Science, Technology and Ecology)

> Other speakers:

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4231

>

> For more information: BioSkop e.V., Erika Feyerabend

> erika.feyerabend

> Tel. 0201-53 66 706; Misereor, Bernd Nilles

> nilles Tel. 0241 - 442515

> Directions: www.maternushaus.de/wegbeschreibung.html

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4231

>

> + VOLUNTARY REAPERS TEAR UP GM FIELD IN THE LOIRET,

> FRANCE [see LOBBYWATCH above for more on this story]

> About 160 anti-GM activists took part on Saturday

> afternoon in the tearing up of a field of GM maize

> near Pithiviers (department of Loiret). The

> activists, supported by the Confederation Paysanne

> and the Greens, gathered following a request from

> the " Voluntary GM Reapers Collective " on a field at

> Greneville-en-Beauce, a few kilometres from

> Pithiviers.

>

> Notably, amongst these were the green

> representatives Verts Yves Contassot, assistant to

> the mayor of Paris, with responsibility for the

> environment, and Francine Bavay, Vice President of

> the regional council for the d'Ile-de-France region.

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4231

>

>

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

> AUSTRALIA

>

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

>

> + LOBBYIST/REGULATOR TELLS AUSTRALIAN FARMERS GM

> FOODS ARE SAFE

> Prof Jennifer Thompson has been telling Australian

> farmers and others that GM crops are stringently

> tested for health risks. " These GM crops have been

> tested rigorously, almost as if they were toxins,

> and no conventional food has ever been tested like

> that, " Thompson is quoted as saying.

>

> Yet a study by Professor Ian Pryme and Rolf Lembcke,

> published in 2003 in the journal Nutrition and

> Health, found there were just ten published studies

> on the health effects of GM food or feed and that

> the quality of some of these was inadequate. The

> researchers also noted that several of the

> independent studies provided evidence of potential

> harm.

>

> Prof Thompson, on the other hand, says she is so

> certain that those GM crops that have been approved

> for commercial release are as safe or are even " far

> safer " than non-GM food, that she would be willing

> to put her " head on a block " over the issue.

>

> A leading expert in the field of GM food testing

> told us, " I don't think that her head on the block

> would be worth having as there is nothing in it. "

>

> What is so shocking about Jennifer Thompson's

> detachment from scientific reality is that we are

> not dealing with just some biotech lobbyist.

> Thompson has been a key figure - probably, the key

> figure - in shaping South Africa's regulation of GM

> crops since its first regulatory body SAGENE, which

> Thompson chaired, was established under South

> Africa's apartheid regime.

>

> Thompson is still an official advisor on regulatory

> decisions today. At one and the same time she's a

> leading figure in a whole series of biotech-industry

> backed lobby groups, eg AfricaBio, ISAAA, the

> Council for Biotechnology Information and the

> African Agricultural Technology Foundation.

> http://www.gmwatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=170

>

> No wonder South Africa has had such a rapid uptake

> of GM crops when the line between lobbyist and

> regulator is non-existent.

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4238

>

> + PROTESTS AT BIOFESTIVAL 04

>

> Lorraine Ford reports how protesters were active at

> the BioFestival 04 conference in Melbourne. Two

> protesters were taken away by police, and a

> one-sided public " GE Debate " featured security

> checks at the entrance door, and much audience

> unrest.

>

> Protesters also destroyed four large vases of GM

> flowers displayed at the entrance to an exhibition

> of biotech wares at the BioFestival 04 conference.

> Two protesters were taken away by police.

>

> Earlier, protesters wearing black gags and holding

> aloft banners and placards had demonstrated their

> objections to GM foods, crops and animals outside

> the conference.

>

http://melbourne.indymedia.org/news/2004/08/76292.php

>

>

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

> THE AMERICAS

>

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

>

> + GM CORN PLANTING PLATEAUS, BRINGS LOWER INCOME FOR

> FARMERS

> In March a much-hyped USDA survey of corn farmers,

> done before corn planting was underway, projected

> that 46 percent of corn acres would be planted to

> GMO varieties in 2004. After planting was completed

> and the seed was in the ground an American Corn

> Growers Foundation (ACGF) survey found only 34.4

> percent - almost the same as last year.

>

> According to Dan McGuire, CEO of the ACGF, " This

> survey suggests that US corn farmers may well be

> taking the concerns and demands of foreign consumers

> and importers into account in their planting

> decisions by holding their GMO corn acres to only

> about a third of the total acres they planted to

> corn this year. "

>

> McGuire added, " Even with the projected record yield

> for 2004, farmers will average $5.51 less gross corn

> income per acre than in 2003 because of lower

> prices. The 142 bushel per acre yield in 2003, at

> the average price of $2.40, would have provided

> gross per acre income of $340.80, while the

> projected 149 bushel, record average per acre yield

> for 2004, at the average price of $2.25, will

> generate only $335.29 per acre, and of course many

> farmers will get less than that average price and

> have lower than average yields.

>

> " Low corn prices have not delivered increased corn

> exports as promoted by advocates of current farm and

> trade policy. Plus, attempts by the US government

> and agribusiness to force foreign markets to accept

> biotech corn varieties has not been a

> customer-oriented strategy to say the least. It

> appears that the majority of US corn farmers are

> putting the customer first and factoring that into

> their seed choices. "

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4232

>

> US corn exports to Europe dropped by 96% in 1999

> because the US could not provide non-GM corn. In

> 2000 US corn was hit by the GM Starlink fiasco. And

> quite apart from the export problems, for all the

> hype about GM corn, it has had a negative economic

> impact on US farms, as another USDA report revealed.

>

http://www.btinternet.com/~nlpwessex/Documents/usdagmeconomics.htm

>

> + SIERRA CLUB OBJECTION TO PHARMA CORN

> Prodigene wants to grow 725 acres of pharma corn in

> Texas. A detailed letter from the Sierra Club, the

> US's biggest wilderness conservation group, to US Ag

> Sec Ann Veneman, objecting to this cretinous plan is

> at

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4232

>

> + FOOD INDUSTRY ALARMED ABOUT PHARMA CROPS

> The Grocery Manufacturers of America, one of the

> biggest food industry trade groups, is speaking out

> against a plan by ProdiGene to cultivate genetically

> engineered pharmaceutical corn in Frio County,

> Texas. Texas-based ProdiGene gave the biotech

> industry a black eye two years ago when the

> company’s pharmaceutical corn crops were mismanaged

> in Iowa and Nebraska. In a letter to the U.S. Dept.

> of Agriculture, GMA said the government is not doing

> enough to regulate crops engineered for

> pharmaceutical and industrial purposes.

>

> Spokeswoman Stephanie Childs said that if any of the

> plant-made pharmaceuticals made it into the food

> supply, " It’s our brands that get damaged. "

>

> For more info visit: www.pharmcrops.com

>

> + US CONSUMERS HAPPY WITH GM FOOD?

> Despite the hype that US Consumers are happy with

> their food system , trust the FDA and contentedly

> consume GM food, the exponential growth of the $5.3

> billion US organic industry tells another story. The

> U.S. market for organic foods and beverages

> increased 81% from 2001 to 2004

>

> According to Mintel, consumers are opting for

> organic foods and beverages on the belief that

> organic farming practices - which exclude

> fertilizers, pesticides, genetically modified

> products and hormones - can help produce a safe

> final product. In 2004 about 44% of Americans

> purchased organic foods at least occasionally.

> http://217.204.41.132/cgi/NGoto/2/67387549?435

>

> + ARGENTINA: FARMLAND FIGHT MOVES TO WOODS

> General Pizarro, a one-telephone town in the

> northern province of Salta, gained notoriety last

> month when environmentalists chained up bulldozers

> to protest the sale of a nearby nature reserve.

> Plans to raze forests have sparked wider fears that

> a push north by Argentina's farming frontier could

> sacrifice the environment at the altar of growth [GM

> WATCH COMMENT: There is no evidence that GM soy has

> provided growth for Argentina and plenty of evidence

> that it has devastated the economy and plunged

> people into poverty].

>

> A boom in GM soybeans in Argentina, the world's No.

> 3 soy producer, has brought farming to plots never

> before seeded. After a surge in prices, soy is now

> grown on half of all farmlands, and northern

> provinces represent 16 percent of that acreage, up

> from 9 percent a decade ago.

>

> Environmental groups say clearing trees for big

> farms or ranches will bring few jobs and do great

> ecological harm, undermining long-term growth.

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4231

>

> + MONSANTO STILL CONDUCTING SECRET GM WHEAT TRIALS

> IN CANADA

> Monsanto is breaking a pledge made earlier this year

> that GM wheat testing would be abandoned.

>

http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Canada/2004/08/17/587920-cp.html

> Canadian geneticist, Prof Joe Cummins comments, " The

> article [above] exposes the absolute subservience of

> Canadian regulators to Monsanto. The wretched

> bureaucrats and submissive politicians earlier

> squandered millions of taxpayer dollars on the

> Monsanto project, and the shameless bureaucrats

> demanded direct and over

> the table payments to themselves from

> corporations... Corporate control of of news media

> is such that there is little public knowledge and

> no publicity on the numerous unsafe field tests of

> dangerous pharm crops as well as the " food "

> constructions. The Canadian regulatory machinery is

> operated in a manner famously sneaky and

> underhanded. The practice is so successful in Canada

> that government and academic bureaucrats are

> beginning to be sought for employment in other

> countries dominated by corporations. The bottom

> line is that the promises and pronouncements of the

> Canadian government are empty and other countries

> need to test all the food or feed

> exported from the country broadly to detect

> fraudulent contamination with transgenes. "

>

>

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

> CORPORATE TAKEOVER OF SCIENCE

>

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

>

> + NON-CONFIRMIST SCIENTISTS " STRUGGLE TO BE HEARD "

> Scientists with unorthodox views face an uphill

> struggle to be heard in Britain, a researcher

> claimed. The first instinct of Britain's scientific

> community was to shut out any dissenting voice, said

> Swedish expert Dr Lena Eriksson. Non-conformist

> scientists were likely to be driven into exile and

> find themselves in conflict with the establishment,

> she said.

>

> The picture was very different in Sweden where

> controversial scientists were allowed to " have their

> say " in order not to create adversaries.

>

> Dr Eriksson, from the Cardiff School of Social

> Sciences, said British scientific intolerance was

> helping to undermine the public's faith in science.

> She said: " A good example of this is with new

> technologies such as genetically modified foods. The

> media are often blamed for presenting a misleading

> image of science, but to some extent, public

> perception of such scientifically and politically

> charged issues turns on the way scientists present

> themselves to the outside world.

>

> " The image of a scientific establishment attacking

> and punishing individual researchers with

> contentious results - such as the MMR vaccine

> controversy - has done little to inspire public

> trust in science. "

>

> Dr Eriksson interviewed about 30 scientists in

> Britain and Sweden working in the field of genetic

> modification. The results showed that British

> scientists felt it was crucial to prevent

> " mavericks " gaining legitimacy, which meant

> distancing themselves from anyone whose ideas were

> too controversial. In Sweden the view was that

> ousting dissenters was likely to backfire.

>

> British scientists were also more accepting of

> management and employer control over the publication

> of their material. They saw it as necessary for

> their own protection in a hostile world, while their

> Swedish counterparts tended to resent excessive " red

> tape " . Dr Eriksson said in Britain dissenters were

> driven to find an alternative audience, which put

> them at odds with the scientific community to which

> they once belonged.

> http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4230

>

> GM WATCH COMMENT: Judging by the treatment of Drs

> Chapela and Hayes at Berkeley, Dr Losey at Cornell,

> and the recently sacked scientists at Health Canada,

> the heavy-handed suppression of unpalatable

> judgments or research is not just a British problem.

>

>

-------

> CAMPAIGN OF THE WEEK - UK

>

-------

>

> + PLEASE WRITE TO ASDA

> In a few months' time all milk sold at Asda

> supermarkets will be from a few selected farms

> through a dedicated supply chain. The contracts are

> still being written and it is an opportunity to get

> " no-GM feed " in there. Recently a campaigner spoke

> to Chris Brown (the person responsible for milk

> purchasing at Asda). The campaigner said Brown gave

> all sorts of reasons why he was not of a mind to do

> so, e.g. " hard to define in law " , " what about

> genetically modified additives? "

>

> Then, says the campaigner, Brown said his customers

> are not interested in the issue: " I've not had a

> letter on GM for the past three years. " Maybe it's

> time he did!

>

> Please write to the manager of your local Asda

> asking if the milk in store is from cows that have

> eaten GM feed and send a copy of your letter by

> email to Chris Brown: Chris.Brown

>

>

-------

> DONATIONS

>

-------

> Our thanks to all of you who have donated to GM

> WATCH. You can donate online in any one of five

> currencies via PayPal, at

> http://www.gmwatch.org/donate.asp OR by cheque or

> postal order payable to 'NGIN', to be sent to: NGIN,

> 26 Pottergate, Norwich, NR2 1DX, UK. We appreciate

> your support.

>

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