3 september 2002
washington, dc - johannesburg
friends of the earth international
friends of the earth groups in developing
countries set bush administration straight on
genetically engineered food aid
nigerian environmental advocate calls
bush administration actions "devious
politics"
Washington, DC; Johannesburg - Friends of
the Earth International (FoEI) today declared
pressure by the Bush Administration on
African nations to accept genetically
engineered food aid irresponsible political
maneuvering to advance the interests of
multibillion-dollar biotech companies looking
for overseas markets.
"Hunger in countries such as Zambia is
being used to play devious politics," said
Nnimmo Bassey of Friends of the Earth
Nigeria. "Africans should choose what they
eat, not have someone else decide for
them."
According to Friends of the Earth
International, the Bush Administration has
presented African countries with a set of
choices that present a "no win" situation:
Accept genetically engineered food that could
cause life-threatening allergic reactions and
contaminate local crops, or starve. Ever
since StarLink, a type of genetically
engineered corn not approved for human
consumption massively contaminated the U.S.
food supply causing a massive recall, food
manufacturers such as Kraft and Mission Foods
have sourced only non-engineered corn to make
their products. Given that millions of
bushels of non-engineered corn are available
on the commercial market, both in the U.S.
and abroad, FoEI considers the current Bush
"take it or leave it" policy deeply
troubling.
"There is plenty of non-engineered corn
available for food aid if the Bush
Administration cares enough to provide it,"
said Larry Bohlen, Director of Health and
Environment Programs at the U.S. affiliate of
Friends of the Earth.
Scientific advisors to the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency have said
that the bacterial toxin in most types of
engineered corn may be a human allergen, and
dozens of reports of severe unexplained
adverse reactions to corn products in the
U.S. have not been adequately investigated.
Despite repeated calls from advocacy groups,
lawmakers and citizens, the U.S. government
has failed to perform adequate testing to
determine the potential health risks of
genetically engineered foods. Several African
leaders have requested only non-engineered
food aid while potential health impacts are
assessed, and to avoid the economic hardship
that could result from crop contamination.
Acceptance of engineered corn by nations
where seed is traditionally saved for
planting, and where special handling
techniques are not in place, could lead to
contamination that jeopardizes the price
African farmers receive for their corn, and
therefore their ability to feed their
families.
Once released, even in small quantities,
widespread contamination by engineered corn
can occur, as documented both in the U.S. and
in Mexico. StarLink was planted on only 0.5%
of all acreage but contaminated at least 10%
of the entire corn crop in 2000. The losses
to American farmers have been estimated to be
as high as $1 billion. The appearance of
genetically engineered traits in remote
regions of Mexico, which has banned the
cultivation of engineered corn, also shows
how easily contamination can occur. The
source is thought by some scientists to be
American imports for animal feed or food
processing thought to be inadvertently
planted or spilled during transportation.
Besides potentially great economic losses
that could exacerbate hunger, African leaders
have other reasons to be skeptical about U.S.
motivations in sending genetically engineered
food aid. The U.S. Agency for International
Development was found by a group in Bolivia
to have sent a shipment of food aid that
contained StarLink, the same engineered corn
not approved for human consumption that
massively contaminated the U.S. food supply
in 2000 (see
www.foe.org/foodaid
for more
info).
"Clearly African leaders are looking at
the information available and deciding for
themselves what action to take. The idea that
advocacy groups critical of biotechnology are
leading African officials to reject
genetically engineered crops is ridiculous,"
added Juan Lopez, of Friends of the Earth
International who is attending the Earth
Summit in South Africa. "The biotech industry
has 50 lobbyists for every environmental
advocate."
Contact:
Mark Helm 01 202-783-7400 x102
See
www.foe.org/foodaid
for
more information on food aid and genetically
engineered crops, including findings of
contamination of U.S. food aid by StarLink
corn in Bolivia.
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