G8 SUMMIT:
Africa Needs Food
Security, Not Experimental Crops
Stefania Bianchi
BRUSSELS, Jul 1 (IPS) - As world leaders prepare for the Group of 8 (G8)
summit next week, a leading global consumer body is warning that genetically
modified food is not the ''miracle solution'' to world hunger and malnutrition.
While large biotechnology corporations, and some governments, try to promote
genetically modified (GM) crops as a solution to food shortages and
malnutrition, Consumers International (CI) insists there is no evidence that GM
crops will solve those problems.
''Genetic modification will not solve world hunger. The supposed benefits of GM
have not been proven to outweigh potential risks to the environment, human and
animal health. It would make more sense to put scarce money in other
technologies that are more ecologically and economically suited to poor farmers
and consumers,'' Amadou Kanoute, director of CI in Africa said in a statement
Wednesday.
London-based CI, which works to put consumer rights and social justice at the
centre of the international development agenda, is calling for G8 leaders to
focus on food security in Africa. It warns that claims made by biotechnology
companies are detracting attention from real causes of hunger in Africa, such as
the lack of access to and distribution of food, as well as internal conflict and
poor infrastructure.
CI says African farmers are faced with unfavourable international trade rules
and although they are keen to improve farming methods, the use of GM crops could
do more damage than good.
GM crops are created by inserting genes from different plants or even animals
into a species to provide it with special attributes, such as resistance to
pesticides. The process is completely different from conventional breeding
techniques, and has yet to be proven safe.
The first major GM food was introduced on the market in the mid-1990s. Since
then, GM strains of maize, soybean, rapeseed and cotton have been marketed and
traded nationally and internationally in several areas. GM varieties of papaya,
potato, rice, squash, sugar beet and tomato have also been released in some
countries.
The production of GM crops has increased significantly over the last decade, but
the issue has provoked bitter controversy. Supporters say they will increase
yields, but opponents argue that they could have unpredictable health risks.
Other major concerns are increased control of the food chain by corporations,
and misleading claims about solving food supply problems and about the benefits
of GM crops to farmers, CI says.
At the heart of the problem, adds the organisation, is the fact that GM crops
are promoted with ''aggressive zeal'' by biotech corporations, raising the hopes
and expectations of farmers and communities. Unfortunately, CI says, many of the
proposed ''miracle solutions'' end in failure.
''African countries are concerned about bio safety, and the consequences of
introducing GM food without proper, independent, human safety evaluations and
environmental assessments,'' David Cuming, GM campaigns manager with CI, told
IPS on Thursday.
''At present, African countries do not have the proper regulatory framework in
place to cope with GM. Yet they are being pushed very hard by the biotech
corporations, and the American government, to introduce it quickly,'' he added.
CI says GM food is also poorly suited to African farmers in part because it is
expensive.
''In Africa, farmers save their seeds to use the following year. When they use
GM seeds they are forced to buy them each year so destroying their food
production systems. This puts control of the food chain in the hands of a small
number of unscrupulous biotech corporations,'' Cuming said.
Instead of spending millions of dollars on what CI calls ''a grandiose
biological experiment without a clear idea of how it is supposed to help African
consumers'', the group says governments and corporations should seek inspiration
from alternative solutions.
''A large part of food shortages has to do with food distribution and access.
Despite what the U.S. government wants people to believe, GM food is not the
only food available. If other food is available, shouldn't Africans be able to
choose?'' Cuming asked.
Rather than discussing the possibility of using GM foods in Africa -- a topic
that is expected to be included in next week's talks -- CI says G8 leaders
should look at ways to develop sustainable farming as a potential solution to
the hunger crisis in Africa.
''This is about making the most of resources that farmers have in order to end
poverty in rural areas. There have been several successful sustainable farming
developments in Africa, including pest control for maize and drought tolerance
in rice,'' Cuming said.
CI adds that to support African consumers, G8 leaders should act to make markets
work more effectively, involve consumers in the development process to ensure
their needs are met and commit funding to implement the recommendations of the
Commission for Africa.
In March the commission's report proposed radical steps governments can take to
support the development of Africa, such as doubling aid, debt cancellation and
trade reform. (END/2005)
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