Cover Up of GM Rice Contamination a Scandal
The UK Independent newspaper's report of an official cover-up of contamination of rice by an illegal GE variant has
serious implications for maintaining the integrity of the food supply in New Zealand and overseas.
The Independent has revealed that while some countries have banned sales of US long-grain rice because of illegal GE
contamination, others have decided to turn a blind eye and allow it to be sold.
It is possible that contaminated long-grain rice remains on sale in New Zealand despite the contaminating variant being
untested and unapproved by any authority in any country.
"The situation for New Zealand consumers remains unclear as Authorities have deemed information about their action-plan
as falling under the Official Information Act," says Jon Carapiet from GE Free NZ in food and environment.
Until the information is released New Zealand shoppers should consider avoiding any US long-grain rice, and should
return unopened packs to the shop for a refund.
Overseas supermarkets have been asked to remove potentially contaminated products from the shelves, and in some
countries they have done so.Official assurances that this GE rice variant is safe are not supported by scientists who
are demanding more data be released in order to assess the rice.
But a more serious issue is the breakdown of the global system to control where GE products enter the food chain and
refusal by some authorities to take action to remove illegal product when it is found.
The international community is facing a serious breakdown in regulation of the food system. It is vital action is taken
to uphold the law and remove illegal foods from the system.
Acceptance of illegal contamination is a slippery slope that will delay establishing a proper monitoring and
recall-system. As time goes on this failure puts millions of people at risk from contamination of previously safe and
familiar foods.
ENDS
See...
GM: The cover-up
Revealed: Government food watchdog gave green light to supermarkets to sell 'illegal' genetically modified rice
http://news.independent.co.uk/environment/article1604094.ece