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WEEKLY WATCH 101

" GM WATCH " <info

 

Thu, 2 Dec 2004 22:53:42 GMT

 

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WEEKLY WATCH number 101

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from Claire Robinson, WEEKLY WATCH editor

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Dear all

 

This week's theme is coexistence of GM with non-GM crops, otherwise

known as GM contamination of non-GM crops, depending on which side of the

fence you stand on.

 

Coexistence is the industry's new buzzword in its attempts to foist GM

crops on the world. It usually appears with such democratic-sounding

terms as " farmer choice " and " consumer choice " , ignoring the fact that

the overwhelming majority of people who don't want to eat GM foods will

be deprived of the ability to choose if GM cultivation is allowed.

 

Our ASIA section this week shows how coexistence is being promoted as

the way forward for India's agriculture. It's implied that segregation

is not only possible but relatively easy.

 

Yet findings from the recently completed UK's 'BRIGHT' research project

(in spite of the positive spin that's being put on it) point to

problems with gene flow between different GM crops, and between GM and

non-GM

crops, meaning that segregation is not possible (see EUROPE).

 

This would seem to be confirmed by developments in the USA, where seed

companies and the University of California mistakenly supplied GM

tomato and grass seeds to scientists around the world wanting non-GM

seeds

(see THE AMERICAS).

 

If coexistence and segregation were as easy as the industry wants us to

think, why is it complaining so loudly about the strict new law just

passed in Germany making GM growers liable for GM contamination?

 

" This law is going to have dramatic consequences, " says one industry

body executive. " Planting GM crops in Germany is now an economic risk.

Simply an economic risk. "

 

It always was, but in Germany it will be a direct risk to the

perpetrators and boy, are they bellyaching!

 

In contrast, here's the kind of thing they're keen to tell us when they

don't have to put their money where their mouth is: " OK, we know that

cross-pollination will occur but we've got thirty years of experience to

say we know how far pollen will travel. And therefore what we've done

is we'll grow a GM crop at a distance away from a non-GM crop, so the

people that want non-GM can buy non-GM, and the people that want GM can

buy GM. The two will not get mixed up. Everybody will have the right to

choose. " http://www.gmwatch.org/p2temp2.asp?aid=23 & page=1 & op=2

 

Don't miss two important stories on the abysmal record of the US FDA,

which is supposed to regulate GM foods, in overlooking dangers to the

public from dangerous and experimental drugs. In the land of the free, it

seems that " lethal " drugs are being forcibly given to children without

parents' consent (see THE AMERICAS).

 

Claire claire

www.gmwatch.org / www.lobbywatch.org

 

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CONTENTS

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SICK JOKES OF THE WEEK

EUROPE

ASIA

AFRICA

THE AMERICAS - REGULATORY BREAKDOWN

COMPANY NEWS

LOBBYWATCH

FOOD AID

CATHOLIC CHURCH LATEST

GENETICS THEORY

QUOTE OF THE WEEK

 

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SICK JOKES OF THE WEEK

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+ SICK JOKE OF THE WEEK No. 1:

South Australia's Agricultural Minister claimed this week that the

biggest danger arising from GM crop trials is the terrible risk of non-GM

contamination! He told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, " The

biggest risk to people like Bayer CropScience would be cross

contamination

the other way - imagine one of their crops has been cross contaminated

by pollination and the genetic material put at risk, these companies

are not going to expose these significant investments to any

contamination " !

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4687

 

+ SICK JOKE No. 2 - SUPPORT THE GREAT DECEIVER!

CS Prakash and his AgBioView campaign appear to be astroturfing GM

Watch's current financial appeal!! " The AgBioWorld Foundation needs

support

from its AgBioView readers, " Prakash claims. Of course, Prakash & Co.

may be genuinely short of cash but given that our research has exposed

the extraordinary level of support that they've previously enjoyed from

Monsanto's PR operatives, it's rather hard to credit!!

 

For more on this, see our Pants on Fire Award: CS Prakash - THE GREAT

DECEIVER: http://www.gmwatch.org/p2temp2.asp?aid=55 & page=1 & op=2

Excerpt: " CS Prakash speaks Monsanto's script just as readily as

Monsanto's own fake persona. He is the mannequin in Monsanto's virtual

shopwindow and one who seems prepared to go anywhere and say or do almost

anything to promote the interests of the US biotech industry. "

 

If you'd like to oppose what AgBiasedView do, please support THE REAL

DEAL - the GM WATCH APPEAL! Details of how to:

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4618

 

And many thanks to those of you who've already donated. This bulletin

would not be here without your support.

 

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EUROPE

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+ SYNGENTA PULLS GM OUT OF EUROPE! - LOOKING MORE TO CONVENTIONAL

BREEDING

Syngenta, the world biggest agrochemicals group based in Basel,

Switzerland, has halted all its European field trials of GM plants and

seed

material varieties.

 

Syngenta's research director David Lawrence claimed that Syngenta had

no intention of quitting genetic engineering altogether. But the group

had placed all its projects on ice in Europe because of public

resistance, high authorization hurdles and the lack of market

opportunities. The

entire biotech research function is being transferred to the USA.

 

Syngenta has now followed in the footsteps of Monsanto, Du Pont and

Bayer Crop Science which have all abandoned their biotechnology

activities

in England. Not one field trial has been registered in Great Britain

this year and Germany is well on the way to finding itself in a similar

situation. In Germany, the European Commission still reports five field

tests planned by various companies and research establishments. The

largest number of field trials is scheduled in Spain. Applications for

nine projects are still pending in that country.

 

Syngenta's research director, David Lawrence, pointed out that Syngenta

had often found conventional methods to be more effective than GM. " We

have conducted many genetic engineering experiments for seed materials

and plant protection and they have often failed. " On the other hand,

excellent results had frequently been achieved with the traditional

approach to plant growing.

 

A new picnic-sized conventionally bred melon, with a market launch in

Europe scheduled for 2005 and the already on sale in the USA, " points

the way in which the business is thinking " .

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4680

 

+ EUROPE VOTES TO KEEP GM CROP BANS

Europe's member states voted on 29 November against proposals to

overturn the bans of GM crops in five countries. The pro-GM position

of the

European Commission, who tabled the vote, has been described by Friends

of the Earth as " deeply unpopular and clearly undemocratic " .

 

Each of the Commission's proposals, calling on countries to repeal

their bans within 20 days, failed to get the required " qualified

majority "

of 232 votes out of 321. For some of the bans the Commission narrowly

escaped a qualified majority against them. The proposals will now go to

a Council of Ministers meeting in the new year.

 

The Commission's proposals are seen as a direct result of the trade

dispute in the World Trade Organisation (WTO) started last year by the

US,

Argentina and Canada. The three countries claim that Europe's

precautionary stance on GM food, including the national bans, are a

barrier to

free trade and harm their farmers. The WTO has set up a 3-person panel

which is currently meeting in secret to judge the case. A final verdict

is expected next year.

 

Adrian Bebb, GMO campaigner of Friends of the Earth Europe said:

" European countries should be congratulated for not supporting these

outrageous proposals. The European Commission only survived today by a

handful

of votes. Their position on genetically modified foods is deeply

unpopular and clearly undemocratic. This should serve as wake-up call for

them to start fighting for the right of countries to ban genetically

modified foods instead of caving in to the pressure of the World Trade

Organisation and the Bush Administration. "

 

A full briefing from Friends of the Earth on the national bans can be

found at:

http://www.foeeurope.org/biteback/download/national_bans_briefing_Oct2004.pdf

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4674

 

+ EU'S FOOD SAFETY AUTHORITY ACCUSED OF INDUSTRY BIAS

A new report published 29 November by Friends of the Earth heavily

criticises the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) for its constant

position in favour of the biotechnology industry. The advice from EFSA is

used by the European Commission to justify the approval of new GM foods

and also the lifting of the national bans (see previous item).

 

The Friends of the Earth report, " Throwing Caution to the Wind " , is the

first ever critique of the EFSA and its work on GM foods. Earlier this

year, the European Commission started using the EFSA scientific

opinions as a basis to licence new GM foods. The report highlights the

body's

industry bias, and points out that:

 

*Virtually all of the 12 EFSA opinions on GMOS produced so far have

been favourable to the biotechnology industry.

 

*Some of the scientists on the panel have involvements with the biotech

industry, eg appearing on promotional videos for the industry

 

*During its consideration of the use of antibiotic resistance marker

genes, the EFSA went beyond considering just the health and environmental

risks, and decided to examine the economic value of using these genes

for industry.

 

The FoE report recommends:

 

*Replacing pro-GM members of the EFSA GMO Scientific Panel, including

the Chair

 

*A review by an independent panel of all the EFSA GM opinions

 

*The application of EU law to ensure long-term tests are done, the

level of scientific uncertainty is highlighted and that the EFSA works

with

member states to overcome their differences of opinion.

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4669

 

The report can be found at:

www.foeeurope.org/press/2004/AB_29_Nov_EFSA.htm

Excerpts are at

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4670

They include the following:

 

THE EFSA GMO PANEL SCIENTISTS

Members of the EFSA GMO Panel have to declare any direct or indirect

financial interests they have. While most of the Panellists have not

declared financial links with the biotechnology industry one scientist,

Mike Gasson, has declared direct links.

 

He is a consultant to Danisco Venture - a venture capital company that

invests in biotechnology companies. It is also part of Danisco, which

together with Monsanto wants to market GM fodder beet in the EU. He also

has shares in Novacta - a pharmaceutical and biotechnology company.

 

Friends of the Earth Europe questions whether scientists who are also

employed by biotech companies should be participating in the decisions

being made about GM foods. Other scientists have declared that they have

indirect links with the biotech industry. For example, Pere

Puigdomenech works at an institute which also does research for

biotechnology

companies. He is also Co-chair of the 7th International Congress on Plant

Molecular Biology - an event sponsored by companies such as Monsanto,

Bayer and DuPont.

 

Worryingly, either some Panellists are not completing their

declarations fully or the EFSA website is not fully updated. For example,

Hans-Jorg Buhk was also on the steering committee of the Agriculture

Biotechnology International Conference that took place in Germany

recently. This

high-profile pro-GM conference " Europe's most important date for

AgBiotech in 2004 " was sponsored by companies including Bayer, KWS,

DuPont

and BASF. There is no mention of this role in Buhk's declaration of

interest. Friends of the Earth Europe believes that members of such an

influential scientific panel should have no involvements that could

give no

rise to any suspicion of bias.

 

Furthermore, the two German scientists, Hans-Jorg Buhk and Detlef

Bartsch, are well known for their pro-GM views and have even appeared in

promotional videos produced by the biotechnology industry6 (a

suspicion of

bias is therefore likely to arise). Friends of the Earth Europe

questions whether people who have publicly promoted GM crops in this way

should be playing a key role in the approval of GM foods. Friends of the

Earth Europe also has two other areas of concern about the membership of

the GMO Panel.

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4670

 

For an updated profile of Mike Gasson, the man who heads the UK's

expert advisory committee on GM food safety as well as being a member

of the

European Food Safety Authority's GMO Panel, see

http://www.gmwatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=176

 

+ UK STUDY SHOWS PROBLEMS WITH GROWING GM CROPS

The results of the UK's BRIGHT ( " Botanical and Rotational Implications

of Genetically Modified Herbicide Tolerance " ) project are being spun in

a pro-GM direction. As the BBC report has it,

 

" A new UK study of a number of specific GM crops has found no evidence

that they are more harmful to the environment than conventional

varieties.

 

" The BRIGHT Link project studied sugar beet and winter oil-seed rape

which had been engineered to make them tolerant of specific herbicides.

This modification allowed them to be sprayed and still prosper while all

the weeds around them died.

 

" The novel crops were grown in rotation with non-GM cereals, and

compared with similar rotations involving non-GM beet and rape. The

project

concluded that the GM varieties used in this way did not deplete the

soil of weed seeds needed by many birds and other wildlife. "

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4672

 

However, it is clear from this same BBC report that the study raised

some important problem issues.

 

In fact, as early as 2000 the BRIGHT Project confirmed that gene-flow

was occurring between different herbicide tolerant (HT) oilseed rape

(OSR) crops in its field trials, creating unintended multiple herbicide

tolerance: " There was some hybridisation between adjacent plots of

different HT rape varieties... " , the 2000 report noted.

 

The report, then as now, tried to play down the significance of the

discovery but, as land agent Mark Griffiths pointed out at the time, a

number of important points arose, including:

 

*Multiple herbicide tolerance is being unintentionally created within

individual plants.

 

*Because shed oilseed rape seed can remain dormant in the ground for

several years farmers are clearly going to have problems further down the

line with this situation. This is likely to happen, for example, when

spraying stubbles later in the rotation which have freshly germinated

OSR seeds in them.

 

*How are farmers going to know which herbicides to use in these cases

several years later on? Stubbles are often 'cleaned' using the very

types of 'total' herbicides that these genes provide tolerance to...

 

*These findings are unlikely to be a short term 'marginal' issue as

similar problems are already cropping up in Canada on a wider scale after

several years of commercial canola (oilseed rape) cropping. The problem

is sufficiently severe that it has necessitated the introduction of a

complex management plan to attempt to deal with the issue...

 

*The introduction to this latest BRIGHT report acknowledges that in

this type of scenario: " Land could become infested with herbicide

tolerant

weeds and volunteers to the extent that GM crops could no longer be

exploited and conventional crop management would need to be modified. "

 

*This may not be a problem just for those farmers who plant GM

herbicide tolerant crops, but also for neighbours where pollination or

other

forms of transmission (e.g. via vehicles or animals) spreads genetic

material across farm boundaries. In this way one farmer can end up making

herbicides on another's farm ineffective. This type of situation is

already leading to litigation in Canada (see:

http://www.netlink.de/gen/Zeitung/1999/991224.htm

http://www.btinternet.com/~nlpwessex/Documents/UKOSRHTGMgene-flow.htm )

 

Four years later, the report authors have been unable to avoid

acknowledging some of these problems, although the focus is primarily

on the

problems arising from the recurrent use of the same herbicide.

 

Note that the report's emphasis on the importance of proper " field

management " of GM crops conveniently places blame for GM crop failures on

the farmer for " bad management " - a strategy often used by the industry

in the US to explain away problems with GM soy.

 

The following are excerpts from the BBC piece:

 

" BRIGHT did show some potential problems with cross-breeding between

herbicide-tolerant varieties of rape, producing seeds immune to more than

one herbicide.

 

" We did create a stock of oil-seed rape seeds in the soil following the

growing of GM crops, " said Dr Peter Lutman, from Rothamsted Research,

one of the agricultural centres that took part in BRIGHT.

 

" And that seed bank, although it declines quite rapidly, does stay in

the field for a number of years; so there is a question about how soon

you could grow a non-GM crop in the same field and not have a problem

arising from the GM plants from the previous crop. "

 

Dr Lutman believes there could be further problems if, in the future,

GM beet and rape were grown in rotation with cereals which were also

genetically modified to be tolerant to the same herbicide.

 

" My experience of managing weeds over many years is that if you use the

same herbicide year on year on year on year, then you will build up

problems. Indeed there are problems arising in North America where people

are growing Roundup-Ready soya and Roundup-Ready corn in the same

rotations. And I would think one would need to look very hard about

how one

managed a rotation of GM crops. "

Full BBC report is at http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4672

 

+ CAMPAIGNERS DISMISS " SAFE GM " REPORT

Environmental organisations reacted angrily to claims that the BRIGHT

research (see previous item) presented no evidence that GM crops harm

the environment.

 

Friends of the Earth's Emily Diamand said the results appeared to

confirm fears that if released commercially GM crops would be

difficult to

control and would cross-pollinate with non-GM crops, which would pose a

" real threat " of contamination for conventional varieties.

 

Greenpeace also criticised the findings of the BRIGHT project

companies.

 

" Much more extensive trials have shown these GM crops are bad for UK

wildlife and no amount of small-scale tests are going to change the fact

that, in the real world, GM crop contamination is inevitable, " Doug

Parr, the organisation's chief scientist, said.

 

" It's virtually impossible for farmers in Canada to grow organic

oilseed rape because of contamination, while in the USA GM crops have

seen

farmers spraying more herbicides on GM herbicide-tolerant crops even

though the first claims were that there would be less. Consumers don't

want

GM crops and the environment certainly doesn't need them. It's time

this ailing industry was put to bed. "

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4677

 

+ NEW GERMAN LAW WILL HELP KEEP EUROPE GM FREE

Friends of the Earth Europe has welcomed the adoption by the German

Parliament of a new law that makes GM farmers and GM operators

financially

liable for economic damage caused if their crops contaminate non-GM

products.

 

The most important provisions of the law are:

* In case of economic damage (e.g. when organic or conventional farmers

cannot sell their products due to the presence of GM material), the

neighbouring farmers growing GM crops are liable.

* If it is not clear which farmer has caused the contamination the

principle of joint liability of all neighbouring GMO farmers will apply.

That means a farmer who has sustained damage will be free to decide which

neighbour to claim compensation from.

* A register with precise information about where GM crops are to be

released will be publicly available.

 

Friends of the Earth believe that these provisions will give GM farmers

and GM operators a strong incentive not to contaminate neighbouring

fields, thus helping to ensure freedom of choice for the overwhelming

majority of German and EU consumers that do not want to eat GM foods.

 

Nevertheless, the German law contains loopholes and could still be

improved. Most importantly, the law hardly covers damage to the

environment

as a result of GM crops.

 

Friends of the Earth is concerned that the European Commission might

want to overrule the German law by taking Germany to the European Court

of Justice. In a leaked document (available from Friends of the Earth)

from July 2004 the Commission already hinted in this direction.

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4663

 

+ GM LAW " A BLOW FOR SCIENCE " - BIOTECH SECTOR

The final passage of a highly restrictive GM crops law (see previous

item) is being hailed as a major victory by German agriculture minister

Renate KŸnast, but the biotech sector sees the new legislation as a blow

to German science and industry.

 

Among the most controversial aspects of the new law are clauses holding

planters of GM crops liable for economic damages to adjacent non-GM

fields even if they followed planting instructions and other regulations.

Opponents say this will create a financial risk some German

universities, research organizations, and companies will not take.

 

Mark Stitt, managing director at the Max Planck Institute of Molecular

Plant Physiology, said: " ... now, research will be leaving Germany.

Firms will be leaving Germany. "

 

Jens A. Katzek, chief executive officer of BIO Mitteldeutschland GmbH,

which promotes the biotechnological industry in central Germany, said

that any farmer, researcher, firm, or organization considering planting

GM crops now must decide whether to risk the possible economic

consequences. " This law is going to have dramatic consequences, "

Katzek said.

" Planting GM crops in Germany is now an economic risk. Simply an

economic risk. "

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4684

 

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ASIA

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

 

+ JAPAN: FIERCE OPPOSITION TO GM FROM CONSUMERS AND FARMERS

Fierce opposition from " concerned consumers and angry local farmers " ,

as well as the governor of Hokkaido, has helped stop a Japanese farmer

from planting GM soybeans. According to one article, this farmer

believes that GM will give him 300-400% yield increases!

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4679

 

+ IS COEXISTENCE POSSIBLE IN INDIA?

Amidst a flurry of industry-sponsored studies proclaiming that

coexistence is not just possible but relatively easy, an incisive new

article

examines the problems raised by coexistence in a country like India.

 

The article is taken from the latest book from Gene Campaign,

" Relevance of GM Technology to Indian Agriculture and Food Security " ,

edited by

Suman Sahai. You can find out more about the book on Gene Campaign's

website: www.genecampaign.org

 

After examining in detail whether coexistence is a feasible

agricultural model in India, its conclusion, which has great relevance

for other

developing countries, is that for developing countries like India the

operational costs of achieving coexistence could be " so significant as to

actually put the food supply into jeopardy were it to be implemented.

In other words, coexistence cannot be implemented in India. "

 

This is an excellent article that is well worth reading in full:

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4666)

 

+ INDIAN GOVT TAKING THE WRONG PATH WITH GM - IMPORTANT ARTICLE

An important new article by Kasturi Das, researcher at the Centre for

Economic Studies and Planning (CESP), Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU),

India looks at how the Indian government is planning to promote GM

crops. The article has been published by GM Watch.

http://www.gmwatch.org/p1temp.asp?pid=54 & page=1

 

Das notes that a panel has been set up to formulate a National

Biotechnology Policy and to put in place a single window system of

clearance

for transgenic products by January 2005, so as to ensure a speedy

approval of GM crops.

 

The panel is likely to draw on the Report of the Task Force on

Application of Biotechnology in Agriculture. The Task force was headed

by the

agricultural scientist Dr MS Swaminathan, who is also a member of the

new government panel. However, Das warns that the recommendations of the

Swaminathan Task Force contain glaring flaws and contradictions. Das

examines these in detail.

 

She notes that the Task Force Report asserts, " The bottom line of our

national agricultural biotechnology policy should be the economic well

being of farm families, food security of the nation, health security of

the consumer, protection of the environment and the security of our

national and international trade in farm commodities " .

 

Das warns that the proclaimed commitment towards these objectives is

mere rhetoric. The actual aim is to facilitate the promotion of GM crops

in the country by putting in place a regulatory and policy regime that

will ensure speedy and hassle-free approval for the commercial

cultivation of transgenic crops in India.

 

What is all the more perplexing, she says, is that in order to create

enough justification for its evidently pro-GM prescriptions, the Task

Force relentlessly attempts to project transgenic crops as the most

appropriate means to achieve the above mentioned goals. However, to date

there is no concrete and conclusive evidence to show GM can fulfil any of

these targets.

 

On the contrary, there is plenty of evidence that indicates the

potential regressive impact of genetic engineering in all these

respects. And

Das details how heading down the GM route threatens India's food

security, its remarkable biodiversity, the enormous potential of its

organic

sectore, the economic well being of farm families, the health of

consumers, and India's national and international trade in farm

commodities.

 

Excerpts from the article are at

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4681

Full text and references:

http://www.gmwatch.org/p1temp.asp?pid=54 & page= 1

 

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

AFRICA

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

 

+ SOUTH AFRICA TOLD DELEGATES TO OPPOSE IUCN ON GMOs

South Africa's government gave " strict instructions " to its delegates

not to support the call made by the World Conservation Union (IUCN) for

the halting of further releases of GMOs.

 

Critics said the government's stance indicated the extent to which it

" kowtowed " to multinational biotechnology corporations while ignoring

the negative impact of GMOs.

 

Explaining why South Africa had voted against the GMO moratorium,

Chippy Olver, director-general of the Department of Environment

Affairs and

Tourism, said: " The government could not support the call because it

was not properly phrased or thought through. We want the IUCN to focus on

building up a scientific base. Making rash calls like this undermines

the IUCN's credibility. "

 

The IUCN, one of the world's biggest conservation organisations,

resolved at its recent congress in Bangkok that there should be no

further

releases of GMOs until it had been proved they were safe for humans and

the environment. The resolution was supported by 84 votes by world

governments and opposed by 48.

 

Mariam Mayet of the African Centre for Biosafety said: " The government

has bought into a lie. It must be accountable to the people and tell us

exactly what it is up to. It appears it is assisting the agenda of the

biotechnology corporates. "

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4673

 

+ AFRICA DOESN'T NEED A SECOND " GREEN REVOLUTION "

Friends of the Earth International's comments on the UN's Millennium

Project Draft Global Plan of Action are at

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4662

The comments criticize the Millennium Project papers, which call for a

new " African 21st Century Green Revolution " and the use of GM crops as

a key mechanism to erradicate hunger, poverty and malnutrition.

 

EXCERPT from FoE's comments:

Throughout the draft action plan, the " need " for a green revolution for

Africa is constantly repeated, yet this is in opposition to key

findings, such as the ones from the InterAcademy Council report

" Realizing the

Promise and Potential of African Agriculture " , published in July 2004

and about which Kofi Annan made his recommendations. In fact, the IAC

report did not recommend a new Green Revolution, but what it termed

" rainbow evolutions " - in other words, bottom up, location and farming

system specific developments, rather than a simple, technology based

approach applied uniformly across the continent, as is implied by the

action

plan.

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4662

 

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

THE AMERICAS - REGULATORY BREAKDOWN

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

 

+ CONTAMINATION SCANDAL - SERIOUS COMPLIANCE VIOLATIONS GET SLAP ON

WRIST

Two mix-ups involving GM seeds ended with modest fines for two

companies and no fault for the University of California, Davis.

Oxnard-based

Seminis Inc., the world's largest fruit and vegetable seed company, and

The Scotts Co. of Marysville, Ohio, a grass seed giant, are on the hook

for penalties totaling $5,625 for violations of rules set to contain

biotech genes.

 

The Sacramento Bee reports that the fines are toward the low end of the

scale for the US Dept of Agriculture, which oversees biotech crop field

tests and movement of plants between states. In 2002, for instance, the

USDA fined Texas-based ProdiGene Inc. $250,000 after federal inspectors

found biotech corn that had been engineered to produce a pharmaceutical

compound growing among Nebraska soybeans.

 

The USDA's most recent penalties indicate a much lower level of agency

concern, although it's admitted that the incidents do illustrate the

difficulty of containing GM plants.

 

Norman Ellstrand, a genetics professor at the University of California,

Riverside, said the EPA's report raises questions about whether Scotts

followed rules to contain grass pollen. " It seems to me that there is a

serious compliance violation, " he said.

 

Joseph Mendelson, legal director of the consumer watchdog group Center

for Food Safety in Washington, D.C., said, " It's good that (USDA is)

actually doing some investigations, " he said. " But is it window dressing

when a company like Scotts gets ... slapped on the wrist and

essentially rewarded for their bad actions? "

 

Seminis was fined $2,500 for shipping biotech tomato seeds to UC Davis

without properly identifying the seeds. Davis researchers, unaware that

the seeds were GM, shipped them to scientists around the world who had

requested conventional seeds. Last December, embarrassed university

officials said the mistake had been going on for seven years.

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4683

 

+ FDA UNDER PRESSURE TO REFORM AFTER DRUG IS WITHDRAWN

The following story lays bare the corruption of the agency responsible

for GM crop/food approval. As the scientist who forwarded this article

to GM Watch commented, " This is what you get when industry pulls all

the strings in Washington! "

 

He also noted, " It is also interesting that The Lancet is yet again at

the centre of another scientific publication scandal; remember it was

its editor Richard Horton who was threatened with having to face the

'consequences' if he chose to publish Arpad Pusztai's and Stan Ewen's

paper. " Their paper, which exposed the damaging health effects of a GM

food, was published after successful peer review despite the campaign to

suppress the findings.

 

Here's the article:

 

Amid claims that it suppressed publication of a study into the safety

of a painkiller, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is under

increasing pressure to reform the way in which it monitors approved drugs.

 

Vioxx, a prescription painkiller made by New Jersey-based Merck, was

withdrawn by the company on 30 September after a study it had

commissioned linked the drug to an increased risk of heart attacks.

 

But the FDA - the world's largest drug regulator - is facing detailed

allegations that it pressed one of its top drug-safety officials to

withdraw a paper on Vioxx from publication in The Lancet. The study,

led by

David Graham, associate director for science at the FDA's Office of

Drug Safety, also linked the drug to heart attacks. Graham estimates that

Vioxx has been responsible for several thousand deaths since it was

approved in 1999.

 

On 18 November, Graham, a 20-year FDA veteran, vaulted into the

national spotlight when he testified at a Senate hearing on Vioxx that

the

agency was " broken " . The hearing raised questions about why the FDA

waited

for Merck to take action, when Graham's preliminary data earlier in the

year had suggested that the drug should be withdrawn.

 

Now the agency is under attack for suppressing Graham's Vioxx paper,

which he hoped to publish at the time of the hearing. According to

extracts from e-mails printed in USA Today on 29 November, Steven Galson,

acting director of the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research,

contacted editors at The Lancet and made reference to an internal FDA

report that contained allegations that Graham might have manipulated

data in

his study.

 

Richard Horton, The Lancet's editor, reacted with irritation. " One

could read such an allegation as an attempt to introduce doubt into our

minds about the honesty of the authors, " he wrote, " doubt that might be

sufficient to delay or stop publication of research that was clearly of

serious public interest. "

 

The FDA said in a statement that Graham had submitted the paper

" without going through the long-established peer review and clearance

process

established for scientific papers submitted by FDA scientists " .

 

Graham says that the charges of data manipulation arose from

corrections that he made between an earlier abstract and the final

version of the

paper. He ultimately withdrew the paper on 16 November, saying that he

feared for his job. " I got a very explicit e-mail from Dr Galson saying

I could not let it be published, and if I did, I and The Lancet would

be responsible for the consequences. " He says he may now remove his name

from the study so that it can be published without the need for FDA

approval. " The FDA is engaged in an act of scientific censorship, " he

claims.

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4685

 

+ IS THE FDA LOOKING THE OTHER WAY AS DRUG COMPANIES TEST " LETHAL "

DRUGS ON CHILDREN?

The FDA is supposed to oversee the clinical testing of all new

medicines, as well as GM foods. But thus far it has turned a blind eye

to an

appalling scandal highlighted by the BBC TV report broadcast on 30

November, Guinea Pig Kids, in which children born to HIV-positive mothers

were used as test subjects for experimental and highly toxic HIV drugs

without the consent of parents or relatives.

 

Many of the children abused in this way were in a children's home in

Harlem. It was reported by different sources to have ceased to recruit

test subjects in either 2000 or 2002 after adverse publicity could no

longer be ignored, but the trials continue elsewhere. The majority of

test

subjects were poor and black or Hispanic. Many were healthy until they

were force-fed the drugs - by a tube in the stomach if they refused to

take them in the normal way - when they rapidly became sick.

 

In cases where parents or foster parents took their children off the

drugs, the Administration for Children's Services, a federal agency

granted draconian powers by mayor Rudi Giuliani, forcibly took the

children

from their parents and put them back into the trial. One mother adopted

two children from the Center and, under medical supervision, stopped

the medication. She saw huge improvements in their health but was later

convicted of child abuse in an action brought by the ACS and her

children were removed from her care.

 

Dr David Rasnick from the University of Berkeley who has studied the

effects of HIV drugs on patients - particularly children - says these

drugs are " lethal " .

 

The pharmaceutical giant Glaxo SmithKline has admitted it provided

funds for some of the trials (Pfizer and Merck, Roche and Genentech were

other funders) but said it is the responsibility of federal regulatory

agencies " to ensure all subjects in a clinical trial provided

appropriate, informed consent to conform with all local laws. "

 

Vera Sharav, president of the Alliance for Human Research Protection,

has written to the Office of Compliance of the FDA, demanding that an

investigation be made as to the possible violation of the federal laws

regarding human research subjects and informed consent.

 

Please read more about this shocking story at

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/this_world/4038375.stm

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/this_world/4035345.stm

http://www.altheal.org/texts/house.htm

http://www.ahrp.org/ahrpspeaks/HIVkids0304.php

 

+ EPA JOINS IN THE CHORUS

" In setting limits on chemicals in food and water, the Environmental

Protection Agency may rely on industry tests that expose people to

poisons, " reports the Associated Press. The EPA's draft plan suggests

that

Bush administration political appointees will evaluate studies using " a

case-by-case process. " EPA's Office of Pesticide Programs' senior policy

adviser said human studies would be accepted, " unless they are

fundamentally unethical or have significant deficiencies. " Widespread

criticism

recently led the EPA to suspend a study on " how children's bodies

absorb pesticides. "

http://www.prwatch.org/spin.php

 

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

COMPANY NEWS

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

 

+ PIONEER SETTLES CORN DISPUTE

DuPont subsidiary Pioneer Hi-Bred International has settled a patent

dispute over GM corn. In the agreement, Pioneer will license technology

from Syngenta relating to two insect-resistant corn traits known as

Herculex and YieldGard. Pioneer also will drop claims that Syngenta

improperly acquired Pioneer genetic material 15 years ago. Additional

terms,

including payments, were not disclosed.

 

In 2002, Syngenta sued Pioneer and other major seed companies over use

of its patented method for inserting genes into corn seeds to make them

resistant to the European corn borer.

 

A trial involving the remaining defendants began 29 November in US

District Court in Wilmington. Syngenta is seeking to stop St Louis-based

Monsanto, Mich.-based Dow and Dow subsidiary Mycogen from marketing the

Herculex and YieldGard traits.

 

Pioneer spokesman Doyle Karr said its settlement with Syngenta

indicates the agricultural biotech industry is moving from patent

disputes to

licensing agreements. Many important techniques in plant biotechnology

are still tied up in patent disputes, said Stephen Howell, director of

the Plant Sciences Institute at Iowa State University. That makes it

difficult to commercialize new products without fear of litigation, he

said.

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4675

 

-------

LOBBYWATCH

-------

 

+ PRO-GM SCIENTIST'S FANTASY HOUR IN OZ

A British pro-GM researcher, Jim Orson, has been busy telling

Australians on ABC's Country Hour, in an interview broadcast in every

state in

Australia, that the UK is getting ready to grow GM crops, that public

opinion has turned in their favour, that there's no future in going

organic, etc.

 

In fact, a Which? consumer magazine survey published on 2 September

shows that British public attitudes have hardened against GM since its

last survey two years ago. Only around a quarter of people in the latest

survey were in favour of GM crops being grown in the UK, compared with

almost a third of people in 2002.

 

WHO IS JIM ORSON?

Jim Orson is the Director of The Arable Group (TAG), which was formed

in 2003 in a merger involving the Morley Research Centre, which Orson

also previously directed. Morley was a farmer-owned research station in

Norfolk UK, providing information to support the businesses of some of

the biggest arable farmers in Europe.

 

In August 2002 Orson was appointed for 3 years to ACRE, the UK

government's official advisory committee on GM releases to the

environment. He

has served on the Advisory Committee on Pesticides and on the

Scientific Steering Committee for the farm-scale evaluations (the UK

government's GM trials on biodiversity).

 

The Arable Group, like Orson, take a strongly pro-GM position and

Morley Research Centre, under Orson, has been involved in running GM crop

trials - a potential source of income for a centre which newspaper

reports suggest has experienced significant financial pressure.

 

Among the companies that Morley ran GM research for was AgrEvo. AgrEvo

became part of Aventis and then Bayer, whose crops the farmscale trials

evaluated.

 

Orson's public statements also put the question of whether his strong

commitment to GM has not put at risk his ability to adequately assess

its risks and benefits. He told Reuters, " The gain to farmers [from GM

crops] is clear in terms of higher yields. We believe there are also ways

of manipulating herbicide resistant crops for the advantage of the

environment. "

 

But the information on yields from GM rape and GM beet in UK trials

does not indicate higher yields, and research on GM soya, the largest GM

crop worldwide, shows similarly reduced yields.

 

Orson's belief indicates that regardless of the results of the UK

government's farmscale evaluations, which showed a negative effect on

biodiversity from GM rape and beet, Orson will argue not for rejection

of the

technology but for continued research - a perhaps not unreasonable

position for the head of a research station interested in trialling GM

crops.

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4667

 

-------

FOOD AID

-------

 

+ FEEDING THE WORLD OR THE CORPORATIONS?

In an article for Science in Society, Sam Burcher shows how food

agencies are feeding corporate greed while an estimated 880 million

people in

the world go hungry. The article takes issue with the UN Food and Ag

organistion (FAO) report, " Agricultural biotechnology: meeting the needs

of the poor? " which states that GMOs could be key to solving world

hunger, and pushes for more funding. It also details the collusion of

USAID

with the biotech industry in helping it to dump GM surpluses on poor

countries.

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4665

 

-------

CATHOLIC CHURCH LATEST

-------

 

+ OPEN LETTER TO HOLY SEE ASKING IT NOT TO SUPPORT GM FOOD

Columban missionary Father Sean McDonagh has written an open letter (at

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4668 ) to the Holy See

requesting that it does not support GM food. It was written by the in

response to the Conference: Feeding the World: The Moral Imperative of

Biotechnology, held in the Gregorian University in Rome on September

24, 2004.

The event was organized by the US Embassy to the Holy See and

co-sponsored by the Vatican's Pontifical Academy of Sciences.

 

Sean McDonagh was at the conference and his letter provides both an

eye-witness account of what occurred and an extremely well-informed

response from a Roman Catholic missionary with a deep knowledge of

ecological

theology and direct experience of agricultural and development issues

in the developing world.

 

Here are some excerpts from the letter:

 

Unfortunately the Conference did not encourage dialogue on the

crucially important question of how to banish hunger from our

contemporary

world. To begin with, all the speakers were staunch promoters of biotech

crops and no other point of view was welcomed.

 

In his introductory address ambassador James Nicholson accused those

opposed to GE crops of cultural imperialism. He emphasized that, " the

worst form of cultural imperialism is to deny others the opportunities we

have to take advantage of new technologies to raise up our human

condition " . I believe that the worst form of colonialism is to deny local

communities the freedom to make decisions about their own development.

 

As in the case with more than 150 other treaties, the U.S. has not

become a party to the biosafety protocol. Given this dismissive

attitude to

international treaties and initiatives and the size and political power

of the biotechnology industry, are we now expected to believe that the

U.S. interest in GE food is purely altruistic!

 

The first speaker, Dr. C.S. Prakash is a well-known promoter of genetic

engineering. I believe that The Pontifical Academy of Sciences should

have checked out Prakash's role in discrediting [critical scientific]

research before agreeing to have him invited to speak at the Conference.

 

The next speaker at the conference, Dr. Peter Raven, was even more

aggressive in the way he dismissed anyone who had reservations about GE

crops: for him such people are ignorant and morally irresponsible.

 

He even accused the London-based Catholic Institute for International

Relations (CIIR) of spreading unfounded fears about GE crops. The CIIR,

according to him, was " not officially affiliated to the Vatican and

perhaps not even to the Catholic Church " . It was obvious that he knew

very

little about the work of CIIR in Third World countries for the past few

decades.

 

When Dr. Raven accuses those who oppose GE crops of being motivated by

questionable motives he ought to be forthcoming about his own

connections with big business.

 

Again the Pontifical Academy of the Sciences should have asked whether

it is appropriate to invite someone so closely identified with the

biotech industry to speak at a conference on solving world hunger.

 

In the afternoon of the conference two farmers described how Bt crops

had revolutionised their lives. According to them everything about GE

crops was bright, positive and modern. One of the farmers, Mr. Edwin Y.

Paraluman, is from Mindanao. I was interested to hear his fulsome praise

for GE crops which he is growing in the vicinity of General Santos

City. I lived with T'boli people in that area for over 12 years and I

never

heard of SARGEN the non-government organisation which Mr. Paraluman

chairs. I do know, however, that the Bishop of the Diocese of Marble,

Dinualdo Gutierrez, which includes General Santos, is the most vociferous

critic of GE crops among the Philippine Bishops.

 

I am familiar with many farming organisations in the Philippines... It

is legitimate to ask why some of the numerous independent farmers'

organizations in the Philippines were not asked to send

representatives to

the Conference?

 

Significantly, Caritas Internationalis, the lead Catholic agency in the

fight against hunger and malnutrition, was also not represented at the

Conference. This body, with decades of first-hand experience in

tackling hunger and poverty, issued a statement in conjunction with

CIDSE on

September 24, 2004 which was highly critical of the theme of the

Conference.

 

I have no problem with a U.S. ambassador using every opportunity to

promote U.S. business interests. However, I am dismayed that the

ambassador's viewpoint has been uncritically accepted by the

Pontifical Academy

and other bodies in the Vatican.

 

The September 24th Conference at the Gregorian University was largely a

promotional event for U.S. biotech corporations who are poised to make

billions of dollars if GM food is forced on the majority of countries

of the world.

 

Given the cautionary language about GE crops coming from Third World

Churches and their leaders the Vatican must take a hard, principled look

at GE crops and a strong, uncompromising stand against the patenting of

life.

 

Read the full text:

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4668

 

+ CRITIQUE OF PONTIFICAL ACADEMY'S GM PUFF

Father Sean McDonagh's accompanying critique of The Pontifical

Academy's " Study-Document on the Use of Genetically Modified Food

Plants to

Combat Hunger in the World " is at

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4671

 

The study document, like the conference it accompanied, presents GM

crops as the solution to poverty and hunger in the third world.

 

EXCERPT from Sean McDonagh's critique:

The document presents no evidence to support the claim that GE food

will help alleviate hunger. It fails to deal with the issue of

distribution... many countries where poverty and hunger are endemic

actually

export food. " Brazil, for example, is the third largest food exporter

in the

world, but a fifth of its people (32 million) do not have enough food.

About 100,000 children die of hunger each year. Clearly, hunger is not

due to lack of food but is caused by both the highly unequal

distribution of wealth and the huge number of people who are landless.

Adopting a

purely 'technology can fix it' approach to hunger problems can create

more hunger and more food at the same time " .

 

Most missionaries and development workers know this but the authors of

the Pontifical Academy's document seem to be unaware of it.

 

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

GENETICS THEORY

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

 

+ DIFFERENCES IN GENE USAGE CAN HAVE DRAMATICALLY DIFFERENT EFFECT

Exactly the same gene or genes can have a dramatically different effect

even in a closely related organism.

 

When and where a bacterium uses its DNA can be as important as what's

in the DNA, according to new research. The researchers found significant

differences in two bacterial organisms' use of a gene linked to

processes that govern a form of antibiotic resistance. The distinction

alters

the bacteria's " lifestyles, " or their ability to survive in different

environments.

 

" These differences in gene usage are harder to look for, but we're not

going to understand these organisms fully unless we take into account

this other dimension, " says senior investigator Eduardo Groisman, PhD,

professor of molecular microbiology and Howard Hughes Medical Institute

investigator.

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4678

 

+ GENETIC THEORIES HAVE AS MUCH TO DO WITH CULTURE AS SCIENCE

In a perceptive essay with this title, biological anthropologist

Jonathan Marks argues that the overwhelming similarity of human DNA to

that

of the chimpanzee shows not that we are " mostly " chimp but how little we

actually understand about DNA. Though Marks is concerned here with the

issue of heredity, he points up questions about how ideologies shape

contemporary science that have a wider relevance to our understanding of

genetics.

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4664

 

-------

QUOTE OF THE WEEK

-------

 

" ...privatisation has corrupted the fabric of science itself. Science

is dead without honesty, which should be judged as the lawyers judge it:

the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. As things are,

this most fundamental principle is compromised at every turn. Bad

results are concealed; apparently favourable results are bruited in the

spirit of PR; people are bought and/or threatened so that they comply,

and

even that once final guarantor of honesty, " peer review " , is now

routinely circumvented. "

- Colin Tudge, " The honesty of science is being compromised at every

turn " , New Statesman, 26 April 2004

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4661

 

 

 

 

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

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