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GMW: STOP GM FOODS

" GM WATCH " <info

Sat, 11 Mar 2006 08:00:27 GMT

 

 

 

GM WATCH daily

http://www.gmwatch.org

---

 

 

Stop GM foods

By Darina Allen

The Irish Examiner, 11 March 2006

http://www.irishexaminer.com/pport/web/supplements/Full_Story/did-sgWhX0RgvUwqIs\

gdL11Zs5FWAE.asp

 

THE CONTROVERSY over Genetically Modified Organisms (GMO) was

re-ignited recently in Ireland.

 

BASF, the world's largest chemical and biotechnology company, have

submitted an application to the EPA for permission to conduct open-air

experimental field trials of genetically modified potatoes in Co Meath.

 

BASF says the potatoes may provide greater resistance to late potato

blight.

 

The memory of the Great Famine of the 1840s still resonates in the

nation's consciousness and potato blight is an emotive issue, so it is

no surprise that the biotech industry chose a potentially

blight-resistant potato as a strategic spearhead to introduce GMO

crops into Ireland.

 

Most GMO crops are intended to be immune to weedkillers or to produce

their own pesticides. But many do not perform as expected, end up

requiring more chemicals and produce `superweeds'. Farmers in the USA

and Canada have filed lawsuits against GM companies in relation to GM

crop failures.

 

Unless the EPA denies permission, the BASF experiment will commence

this April on a farm at Arodstown, Summerhill, Co Meath for the next

five years.

 

But the GMO potatoes would have to carry a GM label, and there is no

market for GM foods in Europe. The 30 largest food brands and 30

largest retailers have a GM-free policy. Moreover, the majority of EU

governments, and many local authorities prohibit the cultivation of GM

crops.

 

The most extraordinary thing about GMO crops is that they are patented.

Under the WTO's trade-related intellectual property rights agreement,

farmers whose crops have been contaminated - often by wind-borne

pollen or seed dispersal from a neighbour's farm - no longer own their

crops.

Monsanto is currently pursuing 9,000 farmers for patent infringement

in the USA and Canada.

 

Most settle out of court, but Canadian farmer Percy Schmeiser, who I

met last year at Slow Food's wonderful Terra Madre conference in

Turin, fought his case all the way to the Supreme Court in Canada.

Monsanto demanded patent royalties for every acre of his contaminated

crops, plus a million dollars in court costs. The court admitted that

Schmeiser had no intention of stealing the patented genes, but ruled

that his crops now belong to Monsanto.

 

In this context, why has the Irish Government never voted against GM

food and crops in a dozen votes in the European Parliament and the

Council of Ministers? Why do the Irish Farmers Association, Irish

Creamery Milk Suppliers Association and Macra na Feirme, appear to

have no policy on GM?

 

The Irish Cattle and Sheepfarmers Association is one of 80 farm and

food organisations that are opposed to the proposed trials on the

basis they would destroy this country's economically valuable clean

green marketing image as Ireland - The Food Island.

 

Thousands of contamination incidents around the world show that GMO

crops cannot possibly `co-exist' with conventional and organic farming.

We've come to a fork in the road, and the time has come to choose what

kind of farming future is best for Ireland.

 

More blight-resistant potatoes are a desirable trait. But natural

blight-resistant varieties are already available to Irish farmers, and

non-GMO breeding techniques provide the only safe way to increase

resistance.

 

With so many independent scientists invoking the precautionary

principle, and the insurance industry's refusal to provide cover for

GMO crops, the EPA should not allow this experiment to go ahead.

 

Michael Antoniou, clinical geneticist and senior lecturer in pathology

at Guys Teaching Hospital in London, says: " Once released into the

environment, unlike a BSE epidemic or chemical spill, genetic mistakes

cannot be contained, recalled or cleaned up, but will be passed on to

all future generations. "

 

Once the genie is out of the bottle there is no putting it back in

again.

 

Most Irish meat, poultry and dairy produce already comes from animals

whose diet includes GM ingredients, but is not labelled as such

because of a loophole in EU law.

 

Whatever one's opinion on GMOs, the reality is that if we get an

allergy or an inflammation or an impaired immune system, our doctors

have no way of knowing if such genetically modified food was the

cause, because food containing GMO's was released onto our shelves

completely unlabelled.

 

We are all guinea pigs in this corporate experiment. This is the

single most important food and health threat in our lifetime.

 

 

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