Guest guest Posted September 23, 2008 Report Share Posted September 23, 2008 >Tue, 23 Sep 2008 13:40:27 -0400 > " Dannemann " <ncowmail > " Dannemann " <ncowmail >Wow, I could cry, ...South Afrika >makes history: 9/17/09 MANDATORY LABELING OF GMO FOODS >X-ELNK-Received-Info: spv=0; > > >Thank you, Tayton! >This is huge! This is history making. Continue good luck! > > > >Sept. 17, 2008 SOUTH AFRICA LABEL'S GMO FOODS > > > > >Dear > >Thanks for your concern. We brought Jeffrey >Smith out to South Africa where he did an >extensive media and speaking tour and >distributed his books and DVD's. Raja John Fagan >has also visited South Africa as has Dr Arpad >Pusztai, Dr Michael Hansen, Dr Vandana Shiva and >others who are concerned about GMO's. In >addition we have a number of NGO's working on >the GMO issue such as SafeAge, Earthlife Africa, >African Center for Biosafety, Safe Food >Coalition, Biowatch South Africa and others. We >have been working against GMO's for over 10 >years now, Biowatch even took the government to >court, find out what happened on their web site. >I have probably had over 200 letters and >articles in the print media as well as been on >radio and TV. Last week I did three radio interviews. > >Our biggest victory came a few days ago in South >Africa when the government agreed to mandatory >labeling of GM foods. See our media release below. > >Best regards >Andrew > >PRESS RELEASE from SAFeAGE >FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: > >CONSUMER RIGHTS RECOGNISED: GM FOODS WILL BE LABELLED IN SOUTH AFRICA > >Wednesday 17 September 2008 >Cape Town : History was made yesterday when the >Department of Trade and Industry handed down a >ruling for mandatory labelling of genetically modified foods. > >The decision came after a clause to this effect, >which had been removed from the draft Consumer >Protection Bill last year, was >reinstated. National Co-ordinator of SAFeAGE, a >consumer GMO watchdog that has been lobbying for >two years to have this clause reinstated said, > " The GMO Act does not protect consumers, it is >rather a permitting system that welcomes >untested, unlabelled and irresponsible genetic >modification to run rife in our country. >Consumers will finally have the right to choose >once this Bill is implemented " . > >Parliament's Trade and Industry committee also >withdrew a clause from the original Bill that >rendered GMOs exempt from liability for damage >caused by them. " Why should food that has been >spliced with virus, anti-biotic resistant and >herbicide genes be exempt from liability, " >questioned Treherne. " These foods should be >subject to more stringent labelling, not exemption. " > >The Department of Trade and Industry's labelling >laws have not gone unopposed. Both the >Department of Agriculture and Department of >Health have opposed mandatory labelling saying >it would send out a confusing signal to >consumers. However, spokesperson for the Safe >Food Coalition, Andrew Taynton said that " the >Department of Trade and Industry should be >congratulated for this bold move. Current GM >labelling laws in South Africa are so flawed >that they do not label any of the GM foods currently on the market. " >Mariam Mayet of the African Centre for Biosafety >(ACB) commented that " government has embarked >upon the first step towards regulating >agribusiness involved with GMOs. Not only have >consumers been given a choice to reject GM >foods, now, GM food can also be tracked from >farm to fork in order to hold Monsanto and >others liable when we discover that something has gone wrong. " >Treherne was however concerned that the >Department of Agriculture would still be >responsible for determining the thresholds and >technical requirements of these new regulations, >saying, " We hope this does not undermine the >excellent work done by Parliament and the >Department of Trade and Industry on the Consumer Protection Bill. > >ENDS > For more information contact: >Charmaine Treherne, National Coordinator, SAFeAGE >Phone 021-4478445 or 072-450-8229 >Email <safeagesafeage >www.safeage.org > >Andrew Taynton, spokesperson for the Safe Food Coalition, >Phone 083 662 0411, >Email ><tayntontaynton > < taynton > >Notes for editors: >- Clause 61 was removed from the Draft Bill, which read .......... >- Approximately 60% of our maize crop >is GM, 70% of our soya crop, and 90% of our >cotton crop is now genetically modified. South >Africa also imports GM canola oil used in >vegetable oils and margarine. Rice, beans, >wheat, fresh fruit and vegetables are still non-GM >- SAFeAGE recently released the >results of random tests conducted on a number of >food products, including breakfast cereals, baby >foods and staple foods. Some breakfast cereals >include a high content of genetically modified >organisms (GMO's) while one of the baby products >contained a staggering 97.49%. >- The GMO Executive Council is >currently assessing an application to bring a >new GM food crop onto the market, potatoes. >Potato SA is opposing the application. > > > > > > > " Dannemann " <<ncowmailncowmail >To: ><tayntontaynton, ><jeffreyjeffrey, ><durrandurran, > " Zhawu M " ><<mzhawumzhawu, > " Winfred Mwebe " ><<wmebewmebe, >Kolbe ><<tmpretoriatmpretoria, ><leopold1leopold1, > " Chris Gupta " ><<chrisguptachrisgupta, > " Bob Phelps " ><<infoinfo, >rose ><<roserose, > " Beth H. Harrison " ><<BethBeth, ><enb1enb1, > " June Varner " ><<justjust, >Kuhn's ><<kuhn98kuhn98, >jwhitaker ><<jwhitakerjwhitaker, >Andrea ><<flyingfish631flyingfish631, > " dean goodale " ><<dagoodaledagoodale, > " Jeri Neal " ><<winkwink, ><blackblack, ><enb1enb1, > " John fagan " ><<scisci, > " Sally Fallon " ><<SAFallonSAFallon, > " Julia Busch " ><<jbuschjbusch, ><michaelomichaelo >Mon, 22 Sep 2008 15:00:00 -0400 >Afrikan colleagues....Keep us posted on the Afrikan potato > >We wish you luck in South Afrika! But this >happens all the time in US. Since the US >driven, multinational biotech companies plan to >own the world food supply, little will stop >them. We had many big food manufacturers resist >the approval by the FDA of cloned meat and milk >from cloned cows...it went through anyway. It >is unlabeled on the supermarket >shelves. Monsanto has patents pending on >livestock as well as seeds and grains. > >CODEX (WTO food arm), has not addressed the >labeling issue in 15 years since we started >blowing holes in their progress with Dr. John >Fagen's precautionary principle documents and >the Natural Law Party in the US and Canada. >. However, not dealing with such an important >issue as labeling has let to the default >position...no labeling despite European >protests. This indicates that the US is in the driver's seat. > >If I were you, I would get a hold of Jeffrey >Smith's new book GENETIC ROULETTE and start >pointing out that rats bleed from their guts and so will babies. > >Here is Jeffrey's >email: <<jeffrey jeffrey, > >Dear >An answer below from the head of our Anti-GMO team, Andrew Taynton. >Love >Ansie > >---------- Forwarded message ---------- >taynton <<taynton taynton >Mon, Sep 22, 2008 at 12:43 PM >Re: Fwd: Poisoning South Afrikans: >Insider thread on GMO potato (w/virus related to HIV and HepB) >TM Centre Pretoria ><<tmpretoriatmpretoria, >Angus & Ingrid Durran <durrandurran > > >Hi Ansie > >We are fighting this tooth and nail and it looks >like we may win. See article below. > >Jai Guru Dev >Andrew > >South African Farmers Oppose GM Potatoes > > " This is the first time organised agriculture has opposed the introduction >of a GM crop in South Africa. " > > >CAPE TIMES, 17 September 2008 >Farmers oppose GM potatoes >By Melanie Gosling > >The proposed commercial release of a genetically modified (GM) spud in South >Africa has become something of a hot potato as farmers and some major food >giants say they will not use them. > >Potato SA, which represents potato farmers, has written to the department of >agriculture saying the potential costs, particularly of consumer backlash >and possible loss of exports, outweigh the potential benefits. > >This is the first time organised agriculture has opposed the introduction of >a GM crop in South Africa. > >The submission is in response to a permit application by the Agricultural >Research Council (ARC), which has been working with Michigan State >University to develop tuber moth-resistant potatoes with funding from USAid. > >Ben Pieterse, research manager at Potato SA, said tuber moth was not a major >problem in South Africa. > > " The benefit is far less than the potential damage to the industry. We won't >save that much on pesticide as we will still have to spray for other pests. > > " There is no mandatory labelling for GM products, and no testing or tracing >procedure, so how do you keep the GM potatoes separate? " > >Pieterse said this was important for export markets and farmers who supplied >major food companies that would not take GM crops. > >Diale Mokgojwa, who manages Potato SA's emerging and small farmers' >programme, says this sector also opposes the commercial release of GM >potatoes. > >The GM potato is the Spunta variety, which is not suitable for processing, >so the big food chains would not use it anyway. > >The plan is to transfer the GM technology to other varieties of potato in >time. > >Owen Porteus, managing director of McCain Foods, the biggest producer of >frozen potato products globally, said all the company's products were >GM-free. > > " We're very much driven by consumer needs and they don't want GM. " > >Kobie de Ronde, the ARC scientist who heads the GM potato project, said much >of the resistance to GM was because of lack of understanding. All GM crops >underwent a full safety assessment before being approved for production. > >ARC's application for commercial release contained a " full set of >environmental, food and feed safety data " that indicated GM potatoes were as >safe to grow and eat as conventional spuds. > > " This is not an application for a full commercial permit so that potatoes >will be on the market tomorrow. We'd still have to plant them in specific >areas so we can evaluate certain questions, " De Ronde said. > >She agreed GM labelling needed to be addressed. ARC was discussing this with >the department of health. > > >This article was originally published on page 6 of The Cape Times on >September 17, 2008 > > > >Regards, > > Dannemann >Standing director, National Coalition of Organized Women (NCOW) ><http://www.ProgressiveConvergence.com>www.ProgressiveConvergence.com >917 804-0786 > > > " It requires courage to utter truth; for the >higher Truth lifts her voice, the louder will >error scream, until its inarticulate sound is >forever silenced in oblivion " …Mary Baker Eddy, Christian Science > > >917 804-0786 > > > " It requires courage to utter truth; for the >higher Truth lifts her voice, the louder will >error scream, until its inarticulate sound is >forever silenced in oblivion " …Mary Baker Eddy, Christian Science > >To be removed from list, please hit reply and say " remove " . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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