Facts vs. fiction on genetic engineering.
Tom

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Subj:   GMW: Bangladesh's Ag Minister has Bad-Idea Virus
Date:   2/17/2005 5:57:09 AM Central Standard Time
From:    [log in to unmask] (GM WATCH)
Sender:    [log in to unmask] (GM WATCH)
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GM WATCH daily
http://www.gmwatch.org
------
FOCUS ON ASIA
http://www.gmwatch.org/asia.asp

Remember the Thai Prime Minister warning that Thailand must jump aboard the
biotech train before it was too late?

The article below, reporting a speech by Bangladesh's Agriculture Minister,
MK Anwar, provides another beautiful example of the bad-idea virus in
operation. Not only does Anwar apparently believe GM crops can do almost anything:

"Agriculture Minister MK Anwar today said biotechnology is an important and
prospective device to help improve sustainable agricultural
productivity to match with additional food and nutrition demands and protect
ever-decreasing land and water resources."

but he also seems to think Bangladesh is lagging way behind the rest of Asia:

"Besides its genetically modified (GM) cotton, MK Anwar said China has
started production of GM rice. Other Asian countries like Japan, Thailand, the
Philippines, India and Indonesia are making huge investments on biotechnology
research."

The gap here between supposed government intent and the reality on the ground
could not be greater:

Commercial production of GM rice has not started in China. Thailand still has
its moratorium. In the case of India, in the words of pro-GM lobbyist Shantu
Shantharam, "all we have is one stupid Bt cotton to talk about". GM cotton is
also the only GM crop to have been commercialised in Indonesia, where it
proved such a disaster that it had to be withdrawn, leaving a massive bribery
scandal in its wake. Japanese consumers have been so hostile to GM that they helped
trigger Monsanto's global abandonment of GM wheat.

That leaves the Philippines where GM corn is being grown commercially but
amidst great controversy and allegations that it is being distributed without
proper labels and that farmers are seldom informed that the seeds they are
getting are genetically-engineered. Often it is the government which buys the seeds
from Monsanto or its agents, and these are then distributed for free or at
subsidized prices to unsuspecting farmers. In other words, GM crops have been
pushed by stealth, deception, subsidy and the complicity of officials.
http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=4795

For more on the fever that sweeps through political leaders leaving them
believing they must succour the money-losing biotech industry or suffer a
competitive disadvantage, see item 2.

1.Biotechnology for improving farm output...
2.GM Watch's letter to the Thai PM
-----
1.Biotechnology for improving farm output, protect resources stressed
Bangladesh Journal, 14 Feb 2005
http://www.bangladeshjournal.com/index.php?ID=3349

Dhaka, Feb 14: Agriculture Minister MK Anwar today said biotechnology is an
important and prospective device to help improve sustainable agricultural
productivity to match with additional food and nutrition demands and protect
ever-decreasing land and water resources.

The minister said this while inaugurating a six-day workshop on "The
improvement of grain legumes for tropical agriculture through gene transfer: New
approaches and bio-safety aspects" at a city hotel.

Vice Chancellor of Dhaka University Prof SMA Faiz, Executive Chairman of
Bangladesh Agriculture Research Council Dr Nurul Alam, professor of Hanover
University of Germany Hans Jorg Jacobsen and professor of Agbios Dr D J MacKenzie of
Canada addressed the inaugural function.

A large number of agriculturists, botanists and experts from home and abroad
are attending the workshop, a press release said.

MK Anwar said Bangladesh has made excellent progress in agriculture
production by almost tripling the foodgrain production and halving the
intensity of hunger and poverty.

But the food demand of the country is expected to increase significantly in
the next 20 to 25 years due to a rise in population and economic development,
he said, adding that this increased demand could be meet only by adopting
modern technology.

Stressing the need for grain legumes to check malnutrition, he said pulses
like lentil, chickpea, mungbean, grass pea, black gram, field bean and
cowpea are being cultivated in the country. But these varieties have low
yield potentials and prone to pest attack and diseases, he added.

"Genetic engineering would be effective in producing fungus and salinity
resistant crop varieties," the agriculture minister said, adding that an effective
transformation protocol should be established to transfer genes of desirable
traits successfully.

Besides its genetically modified (GM) cotton, MK Anwar said China has started
production of GM rice. Other Asian countries like Japan, Thailand, the
Philippines, India and Indonesia are making huge investments on biotechnology
research.

Other Asian countries should also produce GM rice to meet the growing demand,
he observed.

He emphasized coordinated efforts for developing regulatory framework and
policies related to biotechnology and human resources development in this field.
------
2.Advice on GMOs for the prime minister
POSTBAG
Bangkok Post, 28 August 2004
http://www.biothai.org/cgi-bin/content/news/show.pl?0285

We are writing to express our dismay at the news that you intend to give the
green light to GM crops in Thailand. Your doing so risks grave harm both to
Thailand's standing in the world and to the marketability of Thai agricultural
produce.

We strongly support your exporters, farmers, consumers and civil society
groups who are warning you that this is not in the interests of Thailand.

You have talked about the need for Thailand to jump aboard the biotech train
before it's too late. This makes us wonder what you have been led to believe
about where that train is heading? Were you told, for instance, of a recent
report from one of the world's leading business advisory firms, Ernst & Young,
showing that publicly traded biotechnology
companies in the US are estimated to have suffered cumulative losses of more
than $41 billion in the last decade or so?

Were you told that the economist and biotech-industry specialist, Joseph
Cortright has described as a "bad-idea virus" the fever that sweeps through
political leaders leaving them believing they must succour the money-losing biotech
industry or suffer a competitive disadvantage?

Cortright's research on the biotech industry leads him to conclude: "This
notion that you lure biotech to your community to save its economy is laughable."

Outside the developing world, GM crops are in serious retreat, as witnessed
by Monsanto's recent announcements that it will: Stop all further efforts to
introduce GM wheat globally; stop its GM canola breeding programmes in
Australia; withdraw its cereal programmes from Europe. Other GM firms, like Bayer and
Syngenta, have suffered similar
setbacks.

You have said that Europe has opened its doors to GMOs but that is certainly
not the view of countries like the US, who are trying to export GM crops to
Europe. That is why the US is pressing ahead with its WTO action against the EU.

In fact, the EU has just brought in the world's most stringent rules on GMOs.
Many European food companies and supermarkets also have policies of not
allowing GMOs in their products.

This is the reason why the biotech industry, with the unprecedented backing
of the US government, is trying to push its dubious wares in countries in Asia.
Countries like Thailand have become the principal targets of a desperate
industry.

GM crop supporters have doubtless told you that you are in danger of falling
behind in Asia's "biotech race".

But look more closely and you'll see that that is nonsense. Monsanto has
already pulled out of GM in Indonesia, where it is under investigation for
corruption.

China's political leaders appear at best ambivalent about going further down
the GM route because of increasing evidence of consumer hostility while
experts like Prof Dayuan Xue warn that GM crops have brought no "significant
benefits" to China's many small farmers.

One particularly intractable problem for your farmers and exporters is that
GM contamination is difficult to contain or avoid, and the costs of
trying to do so can be prohibitive. In addition, no studies have been
conducted on the long-term effects of GM crops on the environment or on human health.

We therefore ask you not to base your decision solely on the advice of
biotech advocates and the demands of Washington and corporations eager to export
seeds and products to Thailand that are unwelcome elsewhere in the world. We ask
you not to ignore the rights of your farmers and consumers just because of the
hype and pressure that is coming from the US and the biotech corporations and
their local supporters.

We ask you not to put at risk Thailand's excellent name for quality
agricultural produce. And, most of all, we ask you to consult your farmers and
consumers about whether they want GM crops.

JONATHAN MATTHEWS
Director, GM Watch
www.gmwatch.org


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