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18 Aug 2005 12:54:37 -0000

Letter to JoséMaurício Bustani

press-release

 

 

 

The Institute of Science in Society Science Society

Sustainability http://www.i-sis.org.uk

 

General Enquiries sam Website/Mailing List

press-release ISIS Director m.w.ho

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

 

Letter to José Maurício Bustani

 

************************

 

15 August 2005, His Excellency, José Maurício Bustani,

Brazilian Embassy, 32 Green Street, London, W1K 7AT

 

Dear Sir,

 

I am writing on behalf of the Independent Science Panel

(ISP) to urge the Brazilian government to stop growing GM

soya and indeed, any other GM crop, in Brazil. The soya in

Brazil is intended for the European, Chinese and other

markets, mainly as animal feed. But there is stiff consumer

opposition in Europe and growing rejection around the world

on account of serious concerns over the safety of GM food

and feed.

 

The ISP, launched 10 May 2003 at a public conference in

London, UK, consists of dozens of prominent scientists from

11 countries spanning the disciplines of agroecology,

agronomy, biomathematics, botany, chemical medicine,

ecology, epidemiology, histopathology, microbial ecology,

molecular genetics, nutritional biochemistry, physiology,

toxicology and virology (

http://www.indsp.org/ISPMembers.php ).

 

As their contribution to the global GM debate, the ISP

reviewed the evidence on the hazards and problems of GM

crops as well as the proven successes of sustainable

agriculture, and published its report in June 2003 [1].

 

The key findings of the ISP report on GM crops are as

follows:

 

Regulations over the releases of GM crops and products have

been highly inadequate.

 

 

There has not been a single credible independent scientific

study showing that GM food and feed are safe to eat.

 

 

Few feeding studies have been carried out, but existing

evidence raises serious doubts over the safety of the

transgenic process itself.

 

 

GM varieties are unstable; and this may enhance the

horizontal spread of transgenes, with the potential to

create new viruses and bacteria that cause diseases, and to

disrupt gene function in animal and human cells.

 

 

Many GM crops contain gene products known to be harmful: Bt

proteins incorporated into a wide range of GM crops to

control insect pests are known to be strong immunogens and

allergens.

 

 

Herbicide tolerant GM crops - accounting for 75% of all GM

crops worldwide - are tied to the broad-spectrum herbicides

glyphosate and glufosinate ammonium , and will likely

increase their use. Both herbicides are systemic metabolic

poisons linked to spontaneous abortions, birth defects and

other toxicities for human beings and laboratory animals,

and also harmful to wild life and beneficial organisms in

the soil.

 

 

GM crops have resulted in no benefits to the environment.

There has been no reduction in the use of pesticides, while

herbicide tolerant weeds and volunteers have emerged, and

highly toxic herbicides have had to be brought back in use.

 

 

Since its publication, all the major findings of the ISP

report have been further corroborated; and the inadequacies

of the US regulatory system identified by two US scientists

[2].

 

New evidence confirms that most, if not all GM varieties may

be unstable. French government scientists examined five GM

varieties already commercialised, and found all the GM

inserts had rearranged themselves. Belgian government

scientists confirmed those results, and found some of the GM

varieties were also non-uniform [3-5].

 

A paper published in 2002 [6] reported that 22 out of 33

transgenic proteins have runs of 6 or 7 amino acids

identical to known allergens. These include all the Bt

toxins (Cry proteins), the CP4 EPSPS and GOX conferring

glyphosate tolerance, the coat protein of the papaya

ringspot virus, and even marker proteins such as GUS ( b -

glucuronidase). A follow-up study confirmed those results

[7], highlighting the inadequacy of current methods to

predict the allergenic potential of proteins new to our food

chain and the need to take these positive findings seriously

until they can be ruled out by further tests to be " false

positives " [8]. This warning is particularly significant as

a string of anecdotal evidence – including feeding trials

presented by companies to regulatory authorities under

" confidential business information " – continue to raise

serious doubts over the safety of GM crops and GM food and

feed [9].

 

More reports from the scientific literature indicate that

the natural toxin is not the same as, or " substantially

equivalent " to, the GM toxin. Green lacewings suffer

significantly reduced survival and delayed development when

fed an insect pest (lepidopteran) that has eaten GM maize

containing the Bt toxin Cry1Ab, but not when fed the same

pest treated with much higher levels of the natural toxin in

bacteria [10,11]. These findings again suggest that the

genetic modification process itself may be unsafe.

 

Recent findings indicate that glyphosate is toxic to human

placental cells and Roundup Ready considerably worse [12,

13]. Roundup was found to be extremely lethal to frogs [14,

15].

 

A report drawing on 9 years of US Dept of Agriculture data

concludes that overall, GM crops have increased pesticide

use by 122 million pounds weight since 1996 [16].

 

These uncertainties over the safety of GMO are widely

publicised amid mounting opposition to GM food and feed from

farmers and consumers around the world.

 

Many also share the ISP scientists' concern about the

accelerating destruction of the Amazon rainforest to make

way for soya cultivation, as the integrity of the Amazon

rainforests is widely acknowledged to be crucial for

stabilizing global climate and rainfall patterns, and hence

mitigating global warming [17, 18].

 

In view of the evidence against GM crops and in favour of

all forms of sustainable non-GM agriculture, the ISP has

called for a global ban on further environmental releases of

GM crops and a comprehensive shift to non-GM sustainable

agriculture. This is all the more urgent as water and oil -

on which industrial monoculture, and even more so, GM

agriculture are heavily dependent - are both rapidly

depleting.

 

We urge you to convey a strong message to President Lula to

reverse the decision to allow cultivation of GM soya.

Instead every effort should be made to support reforestation

of existing soya plantations for sustainable, small-scale

agro-forestry that can truly provide food security for all

[19].

 

Yours sincerely,

 

Dr. Mae-Wan Ho, Member of ISP, Director, Institute of

Science in Society, PO Box 32097, London, NW1 0XR, UK

 

References

 

********

 

Ho MW, Lim LC et al. The Case for a GM-Free Sustainable

World , ISP Report, ISIS & TWN, London & Penang, 2003.

http://www.indsp.org/A%20GM-Free%20Sustainable%

 

Freese W and Schubert D. Safety testing and regulation of

genetically engineered foods. Biotechnology and Genetic

Engineering Reviews 2004, 21, 299-324.

 

Collonier C, Berthier G, Boyer F, Duplan M-N, Fernandez S,

Kebdani N, Kobilinsky A, Romanuk M, Bertheau Y.

Characterization of commercial GMO inserts: a source of

useful material to study genome fluidity. Poster presented

at ICPMB: International Congress for Plant Molecular Biology

(n°VII), Barcelona, 23-28th June 2003. Poster courtesy of

Pr. Gilles-Eric Seralini, Président du Conseil Scientifique

du CRII-GEN, www.crii-gen.org

 

The Service of Biosafety and Biotechnology (SBB) of the

Scientific Institute of Public Health (IPH) in Brussels

website ( http://biosafety.ihe.be/TP/MGC.html

 

Ho MW. Unstable transgenic lines illegal. ISIS press release

03/12/03 http://www.i-sis.org.uk/UTLI.php ; also Science in

Society 2004, 21, 23 http://www.i-

sis.org.uk/isisnews/sis21.php

 

Kleter GA and Peijnenburg Ad ACM. Screening of transgenic

proteins expressed in transgenic food crops for the presence

of short amino acid sequences identical to potential, IgE-

binding linear epitopes of allergens. BMC Structural Biology

2002, 2:8 http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6807/2/8

 

Fiers MWEJ, Kleter GA, Nijland H, Peijnenburg Ad ACM, Nap JP

and van Ham R CHJ. Allermatch TM, a webtool for the

prediction of potential allergenicity according to current

FAO/WHO Codex alimentarius guidelines. BMC Bioinformatics

2004, 5:133 http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2105/5/133

 

Ho MW, Pusztai A, Bardocz S and Cummins J. Are transgenic

proteins allergenic? ISIS report (to appear).

 

Ho MW and Cummins J. GM food & feed not fit for " man or

beast " . ISP Briefing, UK Parliament, 29 April 2004; ISIS

Press release 07/05/04 http://www.i-

sis.org.uk/ManorBeast.php

 

Dutton A, Klein H, Romeis J and Bigler F. " Uptake of Bt-

toxin by herbivores feeding on transgenic maize and

consequences for the predator Chrysoperia carnea " ,

Ecological Entomology 2002, 27, 441-7.

 

Romeis J, Dutton A and Bigler F. " Bacillus thuringiensis

toxin (Cry1Ab) has no direct effect on larvae of the green

lacewing Chrysoperla carnea (Stephens) (Neuroptera:

Chrysopidae) " , Journal of Insect Physiology 2004, in press.

 

Richard S, Moslemi S, Sipahutar H, Benachour N and Seralini

G-E. Differential effects of glyphosate and Roundup on human

placental cells and aromatases

 

Ho MW and Cummins J. Glyphosate toxic and Roundup worse.

Science in Society 2005, 26, 12, http://www.i-

sis.org.uk/isisnews/sis21.php

 

Relyea RA. The impact of insecticides and herbicides on the

biodiversity and productivity of aquatic communities.

Ecological Applications 2005, 15, 618-27.

 

Ho MW. Roundup kills frogs. Science in Society 2005, 26, 13,

http://www.i-sis.org.uk/isisnews/sis21.php

 

Benbrook CM. Genetically engineered crops and pesticide use

in the United States: The first nine years. Northwest

Science and Technology Centre, Sandpoint, Idaho. 25 Oct

2004. http:/www.biotech-

info.net/highlights.html#technical_papers.

 

Bunyard P. Why Gaia needs rainforests. Science in Society

2003, 20, 24-26, http://www.i-sis.org.uk/isisnews/sis21.php

 

Bunyard P. Soya destroying Amazon. Science in Society 2003,

20, 27, http://www.i-sis.org.uk/isisnews/sis21.php

 

Ho MW. Sustainable food systems for sustainable development.

Science in Society 2005, 27, 33-35, http://www.i-

sis.org.uk/isisnews/sis21.php

 

 

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

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press-release ISIS Director m.w.ho

 

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