Guest guest Posted November 28, 2005 Report Share Posted November 28, 2005 GMW: GM CROPS HIGHLY DANGEROUS, WARN AUSTRIAN CAMPAIGNERS " GM WATCH " <info Mon, 28 Nov 2005 15:30:29 GMT GM WATCH daily http://www.gmwatch.org --- GM CROPS HIGHLY DANGEROUS, WARN AUSTRIAN CAMPAIGNERS Vienna, Nov 28, 2005 http://news.webindia123.com/news/showdetails.asp?id=175469 & cat=Health Genetically modified crops have the potential to wreak economic havoc on farmers, Austrian campaigners told a press conference Monday, warning that the development was the " biggest danger of our time " . One day after a Swiss referendum in which 55 percent of people voted against planting gene-altered organisms, Austrian campaigners insisted the rejection rate would have been 70 percent in Austria. " But we're not allowed to vote, " protested biological farmers' spokesman Volker Helldorff. " The European Union is forcing us to use gene technology - against the will of the population, " he added. In 1997, a total of 1.2 million Austrians signed a petition against gene technology. " Gene technology serves to enrich gene seed firms. Everyone else comes to harm, " said Helldorff, citing the example of farmers in Iraq who were urged to burn their seeds, and instead use gene-manipulated products from the US firm Monsanto. There was adequate proof of the dangers, he insisted. He cited the example of the first " gene farmer " in Germany, who fed his cattle gene-altered maize, watched the entire herd of more than 60 cows " wither away and die " . The reason was that with each kilogramme of " gene-maize " , the animals had eaten 8.3 nanogrammes of insecticide. " Gene technology is the biggest danger of our time, " Helldorf warned. Richard Tomasch, founder and spokesman of the anti-gene pressure group " Pro Leben " , warned of the irreversibility of gene manipulation. He spoke of so-called " terminator plants " which destroyed ability of seeds to germinate again once they had ripened. In India, planting gene-altered cotton had led to " catastrophic harvest losses which drove thousands of farmers to suicide " , Tomasch said. In Argentina, the population suffered hunger because gene-altered soya destined for export had pushed back the planting of traditional foods, he said. ------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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