11 December, 2003
Food ministers cook up a secret recipe
The secrecy surrounding a top-level meeting of trans-Tasman food ministers in Auckland tomorrow is excessive and further
indication of how little input ordinary New Zealanders have into decisions about what they eat, Green MP Sue Kedgley
said today.
Despite a total publicity black-out, Ms Kedgley has discovered that the Australia New Zealand Food Regulation
Ministerial Council is meeting tomorrow at the Hyatt Regency in Auckland. The council oversees everything to do with
food, from irradiation to GE ingredients to labelling to how food is manufactured and what is in it. New Zealand is
represented by Food Safety Minister Annette King and is entitled to just one vote on the 10-member council.
"Officials will only confirm that the agenda for the meeting is confidential, all papers and discussions relating to the
meeting are confidential and that any communication the Council chooses to make will be made in the form of an advisory
after the meeting," said Ms Kedgley the Green Food Safety spokesperson.
The Council's documents aren't even available under the Official Information Act, as it has been ruled to be an
international organisation.
"Frankly, it is disgraceful that New Zealand is reduced to the status of a state of Australia when decisions are made
about what we eat and that such decisions are shrouded in a level of secrecy that the CIA or the Masons would be proud
of," Ms Kedgley said.
"We suspect tomorrow's meeting will discuss country of origin labelling of food and possibly the addition of folate to
all flour produced in Australia and New Zealand. But the Council's obsession with secrecy means that we just don't know
what they'll talk about, what arguments they will consider or what decisions they'll make.
"It is simply unacceptable for such important discussions to be held behind closed doors, and for New Zealand to have
such a small say in what New Zealanders eat."
ENDS