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GMW: FOOD & HEALTH & BRIBES!

" GM WATCH " <info

 

Mon, 7 Feb 2005 11:06:42 GMT

 

 

 

GMW: FOOD & HEALTH & BRIBES!

http://www.gmwatch.org

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EXCERPTS: Bribery and corruption might be a common feature in many

countries to ensure that even normal procedures are undertaken, but this

case lies different. For decades Monsanto has been claiming that their GM

crops are tested and safe. Now it appears that Monsanto employees use

bribery to try to buy the company out of the need for an environmental

impact statement...

 

The questions now go beyond Indonesia. If Monsanto finds it necessary

to bribe at least 140 officials and family members for half a decade in

a country that only makes less then 1% of its overall revenue ... what

is there to expect in other places where there's more at stake? All

safety data for Monsanto's GM crops - in terms of human health - are

provided to regulators in countries around the world by Monsanto

themselves.

As GM Watch (2005) asks: " If they go to corrupt lengths to avoid impact

studies, what chances are there of data manipulation when it is totally

under Monsanto's control? "

 

Or should we see it as a success story? The farmers and NGOs protesting

against Bt cotton were right all along, and not even bribery... could

get Monsanto out of the need for environmental testing.

------

ifrik - research on genetic engineering

The Netherlands

by Antje Lorch

http://ifrik.org/index.php?id=52

 

Monsanto bribes in Indonesia

 

Monsanto fined for bribing Indonesian officials to avoid environmental

studies for Bt cotton.

 

Food. Health. Bribery

 

On 6 January 2005, Monsanto (USA) was fined US$ 1.5 million for bribing

government officials in Indonesia to avoid a decree that demanded an

environmental risk assessment for the Bt cotton Bollgard. The US

Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) charged Monsanto with illicit

payments

in violation with the Foreign Corruption Act (FCAP), with bribery

including US$ 50,000 in cash to repeal an decree requiring an

environmental

risk assessment, falsifying books and invoices, and " questionable

payments " such as for the purchase of land and the design and

construction

of a house in the name of the wife of a senior Ministry of Agriculture

official. Such payments of approximately US$ 700,000 were made to at

least 140 current and former Indonesian government officials and their

family members from 1997 to 2002 (SEC 2005).

 

Monsanto has agreed to pay US$ 500,000 to settle the bribe charge and

other related violations, and to pay US$1 million to the US Department

of Justice, to adopt internal compliance measures including an having an

independent compliance expert and to cooperate with continuing civil

and criminal investigations (SEC 2005)

 

The " financial irregularities " , as Monsanto calls the bribery, were

discovered by Monsato itself in 2001 and investigated internally before

the disclosed to the US authorities in November 2002. The explicit case

of bribery in order to avoid an environmental took place while the

internal investigation was under way, and it was disclosed to the US

authorities at a time when it was obvious that this specific bribery

was not

successful.

 

The employees were sacked, and in a press release Monsanto announced a

new programme to comply with anti-bribery regulations. In Indonesia,

the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) announced that it would also

investigate the matter (Saraswati 2005).

 

In the main case that drew the attention here, the bribery appeared to

be unsuccessful since the decree in question was not repealed. But

doubts remain over the influence the continuous bribery of 140 officials

over 5 years (1997-2002). What is clear, is that the Indonesian

government showed a much more positive attitude towards Monsanto's Bt

cotton

then the Indonesian farmers.

 

Bt cotton in Indonesia

 

The history of Bt cotton in Indonesia begins in 1996 when PT Monagro

Kimia, a Monsanto subsidary, started variety tests to find a cotton

variety for cultivation in Indonesia, especially in South Sulawesi.

Glasshouse and field trials with genetically modified, Bt cotton

started in

1998, and in 1999 Bt cotton was approved and declared as environmentally

safe by th Indonesian government. However, PT Monagro Kimia has been

reported to distribute Bt cotton seeds since 1998 without proper

approval.

(GRAIN 2001, PAN AP 2001).

 

In February 2001, the government issues a decree to grow Bollgard Bt

cotton (Bt DP 5690B, NuCOTN 35B) in seven districts in South Sulawesi.

These plans met strong opposition from Indonesian farmers. Even the state

Minister of Environment had repeatedly expressed his strong opposition

and with reference to Indonesia's signing of the Biosafety Protocol.

 

Before the Minister of Agriculture for the district government in South

Sulawesi gave his agreement for the importation of seeds, the Minister

of Environment said he would order Monsanto's Indonesian subsidiary PT

Monagro Kimia to stop using GM cotton seeds (GM Watch 2004).

 

In March 2001, only five weeks after the decree to importg Bt cotton

was issued, 40 tons of GM Bollgard cotton seeds were flown into

Indonesia. The plane from South Africa landed on the airport's

military area,

tightly guarded by military to keep protesting farmers and press away (GM

Watch 2004). The seeds were driven away under armed guard in trucks

marked " rice delivery' to be sold to farmers in seven districts in the

province (Down to Earth 2001a, b, FoE International 2004).

 

In August 2001, the NGO Coalition for Biosafety and Food Safety

(representing six NGOs and supported by another 72) sued the

government and PT

Monagro Kimia in 2001 for allowing cultivation of Bt cotton without

proper assessment and public consultation. They claimed it violated

Indonesia's Environmental Law, since no environmental impact

assessment was

conducted, and that the decree was issued by the minister as a way of

legitimising past violations by the seed distributors, PT Monagro Kimia.

The coalition lost the case in September 2001, but an appeal to the

Supreme court is still pending (GRAIN 2001, PAN AP 2001, Down to Earth

2001a, b, Li 2004). In September 2001, the environmental ministry,

however, issued a decree demanding prior environmental impact studies.

 

It is now know that during this period (1997-2002), Monsanto was

bribing 140 government officials and family members.

 

Farmers protests continued; now also by farmers who grew the Bt cotton.

Instead of the promised yield of 2 to 4 metric tons per ha, farmers

just got 1.1 tons on average. A quarter of the over 4,300 ha planted with

Bollgard cotton produced nothing at all. Even the Indonesian government

revealed that more then 70 percent of the Bt crop locations did not

produce the promised yields (GRAIN 2001, FoE International 2004). Farmers

could not settle their loans with the Indonesian subsidiary of Monsanto

which provided the seeds. Worse, the following year, prices for seeds

were raised, but lowered for cotton, so farmers had higher production

costs, produced less, and were paid less for their harvest (Li 2004).

 

While Monsanto blamed misplanting for the failure of the GM crop, local

scientists from Indonesia's National Consortium for Forest and Nature

(Konphakindo) see a combination of factors. Firstly the wrong pest was

targeted. Bollgard is designed to resist Helicoverpa armigera but not

Empoasca sp., the more serious pest in Sulawesi. The local dry climate

was overlooked and a drought triggered a massive increase of another pest

which badly affected Bollgard, although no other cotton variety.

Farmers ended up spraying more pesticides to curb the pest infestation

(Li

2004). Claims were made that Monsanto's GM cotton was being promoted in

Indonesia through abuse of statistics to give a totally false impression

of its potential yield (GM Watch 2004). In the end, farmers preferred

to burn their fields instead of doing business with Monsanto.

 

The experience of Indonesian farmers matches that of farmers in India

and Thailand which banned Bt cotton in 2000. Cotton production has a

high chemical dependence, using about 10 percent of the world's

pesticides

and nearly 25 percent of the world's insecticides, so it is not

surprising that it has been one of the most rapidly adopted GM crops

since its

commercial debut in 1996. However, even in the US, the homeland of Bt

cotton, evidence is compelling and yield performances of Monsanto's

Bollgard Bt cotton varieties have been eratic and disappointing. In some

regions in the US, seed and pest control costs have been shown

significantly higher for Bt cotton, while yields were the same as for

non-Bt

varieties. Pest control is still needed because Bt toxins only can

make the

plants resistant to caterpillars, but not to any other pest (GRAIN

2001).

 

Monsanto's permit in Indonesia was based on a limited, annual decree

from the Ministry of Agriculture. The first approval in February 2001 did

not require environmental testing, but later in 2001 the Ministry of

Environment issued a decree requiring environmental impact assessment

prior to Monsanto's cultivation of Bollgard cotton. Since such a decree

was likely to have an adverse effect on Monsanto's business interests in

Indonesia, Monsanto lobbied the environmental ministry to withdraw the

decree. Sometime in February 2002, an employee of the consulting firm

which represented Monsanto visited an senior official at his home and

gave him an envelope containing US$ 50,000 in $100 bills. Despite the

cash payment, the official never repealed the requirement of an

environmental assessment of Monsanto's products (Saraswati 2005).

 

When the approval ended December 2002, Monsanto did not asked for a new

permit for 2003 (Hajramurni 2003). In February 2003, farmers were no

longer supplied with Bt cotton seed. According to Monsanto, its cotton

business was no longer economically viable. In December 2003, the

Indonesian Minister of Agriculture announced that Monsanto had pulled

out of

South Sulwasi. Indonesia the first Southeast Asian country to

commercially approve Bt cotton was pulling the plug on Bollgard and

switching to

a locally developed non-GM variety (ISIS 2004).

 

Bribery and corruption might be a common feature in many countries to

ensure that even normal procedures are undertaken, but this case lies

different. For decades Monsanto has been claiming that their GM crops are

tested and safe. Now it appears that Monsanto employees use bribery to

try to buy the company out of the need for an environmental impact

statement. To make matters worse, Monsanto tried to buy itself out of the

requirements of environmental studies in a region where it had been

shown that the environmental differences between the US and Indonesia

were

so big that Bt cotton varieties released earlier failed and had to be

taken off the market.

 

The questions now go beyond Indonesia. If Monsanto finds it necessary

to bribe at least 140 officials and family members for half a decade in

a country that only makes less then 1% of its overall revenue (0.8% of

the overall revenue of 5 billion USD, Monsanto 2004) - what is there to

expect in other places where there's more at stake? All safety data for

Monsanto's GM crops - in terms of human health - are provided to

regulators in countries around the world by Monsanto themselves. As GM

Watch

(2005) asks: " If they go to corrupt lengths to avoid impact studies,

what chances are there of data manipulation when it is totally under

Monsanto's control? "

 

Or should we see it as a success story? The farmers and NGOs protesting

against Bt cotton were right all along, and not even bribery in a

country that is in the Top Ten of the most corrupt countries in the world

could get Monsanto out of the need for environmental testing.

 

Monsanto

Press release, April 2004

http://monsanto.com/monsanto/layout/media/04/03-22-04.asp

Press release, January 2005

http://monsanto.com/monsanto/layout/media/05/01-06-05.asp

Security and Exchange commission (SEC), Litigation Release No. 19023 /

January 6, 2005

http://www.sec.gov/litigation/litreleases/lr19023.htm

Product information Bollgard

http://monsanto.com/monsanto/us_ag/layout/biotech_traits/rr_bollgard_cotton/defa\

ult.asp

Monsanto: Corporate Watch Biotech Briefing 2003

http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk/genetics/commercialisation/monsanto.htm

 

Bt cotton in Indonesia

 

GRAIN

Bt cotton through the back door. Seedling December 2001

http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=151

GM cotton set to invade West Africa. Seedling June 2004

http://www.grain.org/briefings/?id=184

 

GM Watch

Dirty tricks, corruption and empty promises - GM crops in Indonesia.

April 2004

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=3311

Biotech Sentries - Genetic State. April 2004

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=3325

 

Friends of the Earth

Genetically Modified Crops - A Decade of Failure (1994-2004) Report.

Friends of the Earth International, 2004

http://www.foei.org/publications/link/gmo/index.html

 

 

 

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