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- Info
0602
friends of the earth
international
press release
thursday 2nd june 2005
illegal gmo corn contaminates imports to
japan
un talks on the safety of gm crops
reaches crucial stage
Montreal, Canada, 2 June 2005 - Unapproved
genetically modified (GM) corn originating
from the United States has been reportedly
found in shipments arriving in Japan. The
contamination incident comes as key United
Nations negotiations in Montreal , Canada ,
on the safe trade in GM foods and crops reach
a crucial stage.
According to Reuters News Service, Japanese
officials have admitted that a shipment of
corn from the US was found to be contaminated
by an illegal experimental GM maize, called
Bt10. The Swiss-based company, Syngenta,
admitted in March that they had mistakenly
sold the wrong maize to farmers in the US for
the last 4 years. In April the EU introduced
emergency measures to stop shipments of
contaminated corn-based animal feeds. In the
news report, Japan , the biggest importer of
US maize, said that they will now test every
shipment. Trade sources claimed that the
shipment would likely go back to the US , at
the expense of the Syngenta.
In Montreal , the UN negotiations on the
Biosafety Protocol, is dealing with exactly
this issue - the export from countries such
as the US of GM commodities that are not
licensed in the importing country. The talks
are at a key stage with a small number of
countries - New Zealand , Brazil , Mexico and
Peru - holding up progress that will reduce
contamination from GM crops. An agreement is
expected in the next 24 hours, despite the
huge lobbying by the GMO industry.
Juan Lopez of Friends of the Earth
International said:
"The biotech industry is clearly out of
control and reminds us with every new
incident that we need strong international
laws. Unless we have strict controls then the
contamination of our foods will continue and
our environment will be put at risk. The
Biosafety Protocol negotiations taking place
in Montreal are key to solving these problems
and the only blocks are the disruptive and
unhelpful tactics of a small number of
countries."
contact in montreal
Juan Lopez +1 514 803 6718 or Adrian Bebb
+1 514 996 4090
Tougher measures are needed to prevent the
illegal contamination of conventional food by
genetically modified organisms (GMO), a new
report from Friends of the Earth
International concludes today. [1] The report
was distributed by campaigners in
decontamination suits in Montreal at the
start of key international negotiations on
the trade in genetically modified crops.
The EU impoundment last week of a shipment
of illegal US GM maize highlights the urgency
of these talks to address the issue of
contamination. Key to the talks will be a
decision to label shipments if they contain
GM products, a move opposed by the main
GMO-producing countries. [2]
The Friends of the Earth report, Tackling
GMO Contamination makes a series of practical
recommendations relevant to the Protocol
discussions, including:
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Clear labelling of all shipments that
contain GM products
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The right of countries to stop imports
of illegal GMOs
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The need to make the biotech industry
liable for GM pollution
The report also highlights that:
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84% of the area cultivated with GM
crops is in just 2 countries - United
States and Argentina.
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The US already has systems to separate
crops that could be expanded to
aggressively keep GM away from non-GM
products.
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The world's leading GMO company,
Monsanto, spends millions of dollars on a
monitoring and testing programme not for
safety reasons - but to protect its own
patents.
Juan Lopez, Coordinator of Friends of the
Earth's International Programme on Genetic
Engineering said: "These talks are key to
protecting the environment and the world's
food supply from GM contamination. Most
countries growing GM crops on a large scale
have not even signed up to the Biosafety
protocol, yet they will be at the talks
lobbying for weak controls on their
products."
Beatrice Olivastri, CEO of Friends of the
Earth Canada said: " Canada , as one of the
few countries that grow GM crops must be
forced to put in place effective segregation
measures so that the rest of the world's food
supply, and our environment, is not
contaminated."
More than 110 countries have signed the
United Nations Biosafety Protocol, agreed in
2000 and will be participating in the talks
[3].
To arrange interviews, photographs or the
full report please contact Basia Pioro
at 416 972 7401
for more information
contact:
In Canada:
Photographs of the Friends of the Earth's
"Decontamination Team" greeting delegates at
the opening of the Protocol talks are
available.
To arrange interviews, photographs or the
full report please contact Basia Pioro
at 416 972 7401
Beatrice Olivastri, Friends of the Earth
Canada 613 724-8690
Juan Lopez, Friends of the Earth
International 514 803-6718 or
333-1498049
In Europe
Clare Oxborrow, Friends of the Earth
(England, Wales and Northern Ireland)
Tel: (0) 7712 843211
notes to editors:
[1] The report will be available to download
at the Friends of the Earth Canada website on
30th of May
http://www.foecanada.org
[2] European Commission press release, 25
May 2005.
http://europa.eu.int/comm/press_room/index.htm
[3] For more information on Biosafety
Protocol and the "Second meeting of the
Conference of the Parties serving as the
Meeting of the Parties to the Cartagena
Protocol on Biosafety" go to the official UN
website:
http://www.biodiv.org/default.shtml
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