10 june 2002
world food summit, rome
centro humboldt friends of the earth
nicaragua
accion ecologica friends of the earth
ecuador
fobomade
colectivo madre selva
friends of the earth latinoamercia
STARLINK AND OTHER FORBIDDEN GMOs FOUND
IN FOOD AID TO LATINAMERICA
photo credit: centro
humboldt - friends of the earth
nicaragua
Groups demand that World Food Program
and USAID not send GMOs as food aid
Cochabamba (Bolivia), Guatemala,
Managua, Roma,Washington, DC, 10 June
2002.
- The World Food Programme (WFP)
and the United States International Agency
for Development (USAID) have distributed food
contaminated with GMOs not fit for human
consumption and illegal in many regulatory
systems around the world, announced civil
society groups in Bolivia and Guatemala and
Nicaragua. They demanded that genetically
engineered crops not be sent as food aid.
They also emphasized the critical need to
protect the birthplaces of corn from genetic
contamination.
The Bolivian Forum on Environment and
Development, a civil society group, denounced
that samples tested from food aid provided by
USAID were positive for StarLink, a
genetically modified variety of corn not
authorized for human consumption anywhere in
the world due to its potential to create
allergies.
"The U.S. considers this genetically
engineered corn unfit for human consumption
and has banned it for years. Yet it has been
sent to Bolivia as food aid," said Gabriel
Hervas, President of the Bolivian Forum on
Environment and Development.
This is the first time that StarLink has
been found in a developing country sent
through food aid and the first time it has
been found outside the U.S., Japan and Korea
since originally detected in the U.S. in
August 2000. All test results were confirmed
using DNA analysis conducted by Genetic ID,
an independent laboratory located in
Iowa.
StarLink was not approved for human
consumption due to a finding by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) that
the bacterial protein engineered into every
cell of the corn exhibits "characteristics of
known allergens." Possible health effects of
this category of allergen include nausea and
anaphylactic shock, but are not currently
known due to a lack of adequate testing by
government and industry. The corn was
originally found by Friends of the Earth and
the Genetically Engineered Food Alert
coalition in taco shells manufactured by
Kraft Foods.
The U.S. government recalled over 300
contaminated food products, more than 200
people reported possibly related illnesses,
and the EPA concluded one year later on July
28, 2001 that no level of StarLink could be
determined to be safe for human consumption.
The manufacturer of the corn, Aventis,
appealed to the EPA to allow a tolerance
level for StarLink in food, but was denied.
The company has since been mired in multiple
lawsuits and has sold its biotechnology
division to Bayer.
EPA scientific advisors concluded in their
final report on StarLink that the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control had conducted
flawed tests to determine if StarLink is a
human allergen. In their July 2001 report,
they recommended that more testing be
conducted, especially with children and other
particularly vulnerable populations, but EPA
has taken no further action.
The sample sent for testing by FOBOMADE
also contained two other types of engineered
corn not approved in the European Union (EU)
- RoundUp Ready and BtXtra, both produced by
Monsanto.
Colectivo Madre Selva, a citizens' group
in Guatemala also examined a sample of seed
sent as food aid and found three varieties of
engineered corn not approved in the EU
-Liberty Link produced by Aventis and
Monsanto's BtXtra and RoundUp Ready.
In a letter sent by the WFP in Guatemala
on April 1, 2002 said that "All food given by
the WFP is certified by the health
authorities of the Minister of Agriculture,
Ranching and Food and the Minister of Public
Health and Social assistance in order not to
allow the introduction of GM products". The
discovery of GMOs by Colectivo Madre Selva
indicates a lack of adequate monitoring
systems and neglect by the WFP of the food
security of Guatemala.
Centro Humboldt, working with other
members of the Network for a GMO-Free
Nicaragua, obtained samples of food aid from
different parts of the country. One seed
sample contained 3.8% of a GMO variety
approved in the U.S. and the EU, and three
samples of a corn and soy flour blend
contained Monsanto's RoundUp Ready corn.
"It is unacceptable that the children of
Nicaragua are consuming genetically modified
products that come masked as food aid for our
country. It is well known that baby food
companies in the U.S. and Europe do not use
genetically modified products," said Julio
Sanchez of Centro Humboldt.
In a news release dated May 24, 2002, the
World Food Program declared that "The WFP
does NOT distribute food that is NOT
acceptable for human consumption by the
citizens of the producing countries (donor
countries) and by the countries that receive
the food assistance." In 2000, Dan Glickman,
then Secretary of the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, said that the agency would make
sure StarLink did not enter food aid.
Food aid with genetically modified seed
may be another pathway of genetically
engineered crops into one of the birthplaces
of corn, creating a form of biological
pollution that cannot be recalled. Commercial
imports of corn seed for food to Mexico has
recently been reported as a likely pathway
threatening native Mexican varieties.
background material:
Photos, test results, position statements
by the World Food Program, links to the World
Food Summit webpage, fact sheets on
genetically engineered StarLink corn, the
regulatory history of StarLink, and the
laboratory testing protocol are located on
the Friends of the Earth website at:
www.foe.org/foodaid
For more information please
contact:
Rome, Friends of the Earth delegation
at the World Food Summit:
Julio Sánchez, Centro Humboldt-Friends of
the Earth Nicaragua (ES)
Lucia Gallardo, Acción Ecológica-Friends
of the Earth Ecuador (ES)
Juan López, Friends of the Earth
Internacional, (ES) (EN) (FR)
Delegation tel.: +39 3397449630
La Paz (Bolivia)
Patricia Molina, FOBOMADE, tel. + 591 2
2422105 (ES) (EN)
Guatemala
Magalí Rey Rosa, Colectivo Madre Selva,
tel. + 502 3322690 (ES) (EN)
Managua
Amado Ordoñez, Centro Humboldt-Friends of
the Earth Nicaragua, tel. + 505 249 8922
(ES)
Washington D.C
.
Larry Bohlen, Friends of the Earth U.S.,
tel. + 1 202 783 7400 (EN)
Photo credit:
FOBOMADE
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