GM WATCH daily
http://www.gmwatch.org
---
---
ROBERT VINT  COMMENT: In the face of global mass opposition to GM crops from 
farmers,  consumers, 
development and environmental organisations the advocates of  biotechnology 
are increasingly showing signs of insanity. 

This article  (below) by C Kameswara Rao of the "Foundation for Biotech 
Awareness and  Education" is in response to the burning of a rice trial by 400 
Indian farmers  and the landowner - who had not been informed in advance that 
it was a GM  crop. 

Rao states that "rice pollen are viable only for about five  minutes during 
which they cannot be carried over more than a few meters and  
after that period they cannot 'contaminate' any other rice variety" - he  
says this at a time when most of America's rice exports are being returned home  
because rice across six states has been contaminated by GM trials. 

He  claims that Monsanto (Mahyco) did not need to inform the landowner about 
the  nature of the trial crop. He believes that GM crop trials should be 
carried out  secretly behind high-security fences under 24-hour surveillance and 
that GM  seeds should be stored in bomb-proof bunkers. It is fairly obvious that 
he also  advocates mass 're-education' of the entire population.

Why not instead  develop the kinds of seeds farmers and consumers want?

GM WATCH COMMENT:  Robert's suggestion that C Kameswara Rao's article can be 
put down to lunacy  under duress may be overly charitable.

C Kameswara Rao has previously  claimed that GM opponents are a "miniscule 
minority" who "indulge in violence"  and "create public suspicion and fear and 
serve diverse vested interests" via  "misinformation, disinformation and facts 
used out-of-context".

And  everything he claims in his piece below is consistent with such a 
perspective  but, somewhat typically, he makes his case through exactly the means he 
 attributes to others!

Take, for instance, his claim that, "In the event  of Golden Rice, research 
laboratories, trial fields and even scientific workers  were attacked, striking 
such a fear that led to hiding a handful of prototype  Golden Rice seed in a 
bombproof bunker in an unspecified place in  Switzerland."

In monitoring the GM debate for GM Watch over the past 8  years, we've never 
previously come across a single reference to any of these  multiple attacks 
Kameswara Rao claims struck such terror into the developers of  Golden Rice. 

Curious that.

And on top of the disinformation, we  get the facts out-of-context. 

When, for instance, he says that Danish  anti-terror laws were deployed 
against Greenpeace, he doesn't explain that this  gave rise to considerable 
controversy because their actual crime was the hanging  of a banner on a corporate  
headquarters!
http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=5240

Likewise,  when C Kameswara Rao says a French court of appeal convicted 49 
activists for  destroying GM maize, he fails to mention that an earlier court 
ruling found  their actions justified because "the unbridled distribution of 
modified genes...  constitutes a clear and present danger for the well-being of  
others".
http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=6692

But most  ludicrous of all are his claims that India's GM trial conditions 
are not being  violated because (a) the trials are supposed to be monitored and 
(b) Monsanto's  partner Mayhco says they're sticking to the rules.

There's been repeated  evidence that the monitoring is either non-existent or 
dysfunctional and that  the likes of Mayhco are totally failing to stick to 
the rules. So much so, in  fact, that trial crops are being harvested and sold 
on into the food  chain!!
http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=6309 

And, according  to a recent article in the Indian Express, the problems with 
adequate monitoring  are admitted to even "in the minutes of the meetings of 
the Genetic Engineering  Approval Committee (GEAC), the apex regulatory body 
for GMOs".   
http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=7241

But C Kameswara Rao is  admitting nothing, preferring to project corporate 
fantasies from within his  reality-proof bunker. 
---
---
FROM VERBALISM AND VOCALISM TO  VANDALISM: GRADUATION OF ANTI-AGRIBIOTECH 
ACTIVISM IN INDIA
C Kameswara  Rao
Foundation for Biotechnology Awareness and Education, Bangalore, India  
[log in to unmask], www.fbae.org, www.fbaeblog.org

A few years ago activists,  allegedly belonging to the Karnataka Rytha 
Sangha, the State farmers'  organization, burned Mahyco's trial Bt cotton fields in 
Karnataka, India.   

On October 28, 2006, in Rampura village in Karnal, Haryana State, the  
Bharatiya Kissan Union (BKU), a farmers’ organization, using some 400 local  farmers 
torched Mahyco's Bt rice under field trials.   Mahyco suffers  a loss of 
Rupees one million, and needs to restart the process.

A BKU  leader threatened to burn all such fields in the country where trials 
are  underway, and said that 'On Friday (October 27), we got a tip-off from 
Hyderabad  that such tests were underway in Karnal'. In all probability the 
Centre for  Sustainable Agriculture, an active anti-biotech group, could be the 
source of  the tip-off.  BKU seems to have also sent a team to Gorakhpur (Uttar  
Pradesh), where similar trials are going on in a field.  

A source  considers that 'it's plain and simple misinformation that led to 
this'.   But this is a case where ignorance is no bliss.  

Though the Police  were informed of the threat to burn the crop an hour in 
advance, they seem to  have reached the field an hour after the damage was done. 
 

The  destroyed rice crop was a Bt transgenic with Cry 1Ac gene, to control 
the  shoot-borer disease, where conventional measures have largely failed.  The  
trials are legal for two reasons: a) on July 11, 2006, the Review Committee 
on  Genetic Manipulation (RCGM) permitted Mahyco to conduct multi-location 
limited  field trials of this transgenic, at 12 sites in Haryana, Uttar Pradesh,  
Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, and Andhra Pradesh, and b) Mahyco got on  
lease a two-acre plot of farm land of a Haryana farmer for Rs. 15,000, to  
conduct these trials.   

The activists cited several reasons in  defense of their action:

That the farmer who leased the land was not  informed of what seeds were sown 
and for what purpose, but one wonders if Mahyco  was obliged to do this.  
This farmer who joined the arsonists does not lose  anything, as he gets his 
lease money and gains the appreciation of the BKU for  joining them.

The Haryana President of BKU said that the 'tests were  being conducted in 
violation of the rules'.   What and whose rules  were violated?  Under the 
statutory norms, the RCGM and other expert  Committees monitor these trials for 
compliance of regulations and results.   Mahyco maintains that they adhered to 
all precautions essential for conducting  the field tests.

The BKU leader declared that 'such trials will be  disastrous for the farmers 
as they will not only contaminate the soil, but also  adversely affect yield 
from existing rice varieties'.   If he meant  that Bt proteins get into the 
soil, he is ignorant that there is ever so much of  Bt proteins in the soil, as 
Bt is an ubiquitous soil bacterium.   The  leader certainly cannot explain how 
the yield from the existing rice varieties  would be adversely affected.  

Another concern expressed was that  ‘on-field GM trials in a region, which is 
the Centre of Origin, are fraught with  risks to the bio-diversity of that 
crop and can contaminate the rice gene  pool’.   No part of India is the sole 
Centre of Origin of rice.   Except the north eastern part of India and remotely 
possibly some districts in  Orissa, no Indian region can claim to be the 
Centre of Diversity.    For the past several decades, all rice growing regions in 
India have been  growing different varieties of rice developed in the Green 
Revolution packages,  and the kind of change or ‘damage’ to the diversity feared 
from GE crops, has  already happened. 

The statement that ‘its (the GM rice’s) pollen could  contaminate other 
non-GM paddy fields in the vicinity’ reflects sheer ignorance  of the reproductive 
biology of the rice plant.  Field trials are carefully  planned with adequate 
separation distances and a refugium.   The rice  pollen are viable only for 
about five minutes during which they cannot be  carried over more than a few 
meters and after that period they cannot  ‘contaminate’ any other rice variety. 
 

The farmers said  multinational companies were trying to destroy Indian seeds 
by bringing in GM  seeds.   GE crops are introduced into the country adopting 
scientific  and legal procedures and it was the private seed companies that 
largely  sustained Green Revolution, resulting in surplus production of food 
grains in  the country.

The statement that 'such trials were being done  surreptitiously without 
taking into account the consequences' does not mean  anything, when the feared 
consequences are not spelt out.   Even when  unadvertised field are destroyed, 
what would be the fate of advertised trial  fields?

GE crop vandalization occurred earlier also in  Europe.   In the event of 
Golden Rice, research laboratories, trial  fields and even scientific workers 
were attacked, striking such a fear that led  to hiding a handful of prototype 
Golden Rice seed in a bombproof bunker in an  unspecified place in Switzerland.  
 

In the European Union  countries, the Law often caches up.  The Danish Terror 
Law was invoked in  May 2006 against Greenpeace and the French Court of 
appeal convicted 49  activists for destroying GE maize in June 2006.  

In New Zealand, in  1999 the Wild Greens Group destroyed a GM potato trial at 
Lincoln. In 2002,  protesters trashed three years of research on GM potatoes 
by the Crop and Food  Research (CFR).   Whenever field tests were done, CFR 
fences the area  and keeps it under 24-hour surveillance.   Tight security will 
now be  in place to protect field tests for GE vegetables.

This time in India,  fortunately there is some reaction from the Official 
quarters: a) about a 100  arsonists and their BKU leader were booked by the 
Karnal District Police, on  October 30, on charges of criminal intimidation and 
damage to property by fire;  b) Karnal Superintendent of Police said the role of 
the police would also be  probed and if they were found erring, action would 
be taken;  c) the  Haryana Government stated on October 31 that it will inquire 
into the burning of  genetically modified (GM) crops by protesting farmers 
near Karnal city; and d)  the Chief Minister of the State of Haryana stated that 
the incident of burning  of the GM crops was unfortunate and it will be 
probed.  

When the  GEAC ordered to burn illegal Bt cotton crop some years ago, 
farmers'  organizations prevented it, as any crop is sacred and cannot be destroyed.  
 Often farmers who are expected to respect a crop are instigated to vandalize 
 it.  But destroying a legally grown private crop is a criminal act, which  
should not go unpunished.  

November 3,  2006




----------------------------------------------------------
You  are subscribed as [log in to unmask]
To unsubscribe simply click the link  below:
http://www.gmwatch.org/unsub.asp?ID=1097&sec=pbmhh

This  message has been sent because you subscribed to the GM Watch  List.
http://www.gmwatch.org

------------------------------------------------------------




- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
To unsubsribe from the IOWA-TOPICS list, send any message to:
[log in to unmask]

Check out our Listserv Lists support site for more information:
http://www.sierraclub.org/lists/faq.asp

Sign up to receive Sierra Club Insider, the flagship
e-newsletter. Sent out twice a month, it features the Club's
latest news and activities. Subscribe and view recent
editions at http://www.sierraclub.org/insider/