QUOTE:
"What shall we do when anti-coagulants arrive in Mexicans'  tortilla?"
================================
NOTE: For the French original of this Le Monde  article:
http://www.lemonde.fr/planete/article/2008/12/11/au-mexique-le-berceau-du-mais
-contamine-par-des-ogm_1129750_3244.html  
This translation is by Truthout's French language editor, Leslie  Thatcher.
---
---
GMO Contamination in Mexico's Cradle of  Corn
Joëlle Stolz
Le Monde, 11 December  2008
http://www.truthout.org/121208D

Raise the alarm for Mexican  corn's biosecurity: a molecular study conducted 
by Mexican, American and Dutch  researchers demonstrates the presence of genes 
from genetically modified  organisms (GMO) among the varieties of traditional 
corn cultivated in the remote  regions of Oaxaca State in the southern part 
of the country, even though the  Mexican government has always maintained a 
moratorium on the use of transgenic  seed.

The results of this study incite the experts to demand much more  restrictive 
protective measures. "Old time" agriculture as practiced in Mexico -  where 
wind-blown pollination of corn is the norm and where peasants are in the  habit 
of exchanging their seed - seems to aggravate the risk of rapid GMO  
contamination.

An article that details their conclusions should be  published in the next 
edition of the review, "Molecular Ecology." It was written  by Elena 
Alvarez-Buylla of the Institute for Ecology of the Autonomous National  University of 
Mexico (UNAM), with the collaboration of a dozen other  scientists.

Their work could relaunch the controversy that was unleashed  in 2001 by a 
highly controversial article in the magazine, "Nature," the authors  of which, 
biologists David Quist and Ignacio Chapela from the University of  California 
at Berkeley, revealed that criollos (traditional) corn from the  Oaxaca region 
- one of the cradles of that cereal - were contaminated by Roundup  Ready (RR) 
and Bt genes, property of the American company Monsanto.

In  her book, "The World According to Monsanto," (due for release [in 
English, a  French edition is already available] in March 2009 and already available 
for  pre-order at Amazon.com), Marie-Monique Robin related how Mr. Chapela 
became a  victim of "media lynching" at that time at the instigation of the 
dominant  company in the GMO market. "Nature" ended up publishing a disclaimer, 
deeming  that the two biologists' article was insufficiently backed up.

However,  seven years later, the work Mrs. Alvarez-Buylla directed broadly 
confirms their  conclusions, as a report published in the November 13 "Nature" 
emphasizes. The  researchers have discovered transgenes in three of the 
twenty-three fields of  Oaxaca's northern sierra where samples were taken in 2001, 
then in two places  sampled in 2004.

American Allison Snow, of the University of California  and author in 2005 of 
a preliminary study that seemed to undermine Ignacio  Chapela and David 
Quist's discoveries (and which were then immediately exploited  by GMO partisans), 
is publishing an additional complimentary note in the same  issue of 
"Molecular Ecology," in which she judges the molecular analysis  conducted by the UNAM 
team to be "very good," bringing to light "the positive  evidence of 
transgenes."

This acknowledgement did not come without  difficulty. "We battled for two 
years to get the results of our study  published," declares Mrs. Alvarez-Buylla. 
"In the course of my entire career, I  have never encountered so many 
difficulties! There were efforts to stop the  publication of this scientific data!" 
Biologist José Sarukhan, a UNAM researcher  and member of the United States 
National Academy of Science, had recommended the  article for publication by that 
organization's review. The latter rejected the  article in March, with the 
justification that it risked provoking "excessive  media attention for political 
or environmentally-related reasons ..."

How  - in spite of the moratorium - have GMO transgenes migrated to the far 
depths of  Oaxaca's mountains, and also to Sinaloa State in the north, the 
biggest producer  of corn for human consumption, and to Milpa Alta, a district on 
the periphery of  Mexico? They are found in one percent of the plots analyzed, 
which is a lot in  the Mexican context, where 75 percent of the corn planted 
comes from seeds  selected by peasants from their own harvest.

The first hypothesis is that  some farmers are illegally importing transgenic 
seeds. Strong suspicions  surround the company Pioneer, a big supplier of 
hybrid corn seeds purchased by  Mexico from the United States and distributed to 
small farmers through  government aid programs.

Preliminary data indicate that a third of  Pioneer's seeds are contaminated 
by GMO, any distinctive labeling of which  Monsanto has succeeded in preventing.

The study's authors call for a  strengthening of "biosecurity measures" to 
preserve native corn varieties,  especially in Mexico, corn's "center of 
origin." They say Mexico must set up  truly independent laboratories and adapt 
criteria of molecular analysis to the  Mexican reality, rather than trusting 
"methods used in countries such as the  United States which have an agricultural 
system entirely different from our  own."

But their greatest concern at present involves planned  pharmaceutical trusts 
which want to make a profit on corn biomass and use it as  a bioreactor in 
order, for example, to express vaccines and anti-coagulants.  

"Given the incidents that have already occurred in the United States  where 
they have trouble separating bioreactors from GMO, we may fear that corn  could 
turn into the garbage bin of the pharmaceutical industry, at the expense  of 
its purpose as food," fears Mrs. Alvarez-Buylla. "What shall we do when  
anti-coagulants arrive in Mexicans'  tortilla?"


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