Minister Must Act On AgResearch Chicanery
Documents released under the Official information Act (OIA) to the Dominion Post are a serious reflection on the way
AgResearch has sought to cover up their lack of expertise and understanding on issues that are integral to animal and
environmental safety, namely horizontal gene transfer.
GE Free NZ asked the Centre of Biosafety - Professor Jack Heinemann to simplify a document on Horizontal gene transfer
provided by AgResearch. Dr Heinemann presented AgResearch with the draft report on his findings before releasing it to
GE Free NZ, asking for comment. Internal OIA documents show AgResearch staff lacked adequate scientific understanding of
the serious issues his report raised , and instead went into PR-management mode.
“The scrabble to find scientists to try and discredit the report shows that the public cannot trust AgResearch and their
partners. Instead of taking a genuinely scientific approach that is vital to meet their responsibilities to the New
Zealand public and economic wellbeing, AgResearch opted for ad-hominem attacks and spin,” said Claire Bleakley president
of GE-Free NZ (in food and environment).
GE-Free NZ contacted the AgResearch Biotechnology Manager asking that he recommend referees to comment on the microbial
characterisation of offal pits that GE-Free NZ had received under the OIA. Dr. Suttie supplied two referees, however a
month later he sent further correspondence asking us to desist from contacting their referees as they had “no intention
of ever providing a review of our reports to you.”
“We have tried to engage constructively with AgResearch and participated responsibly in the regulatory regime, but this
is a classic case of how 'big business', and scientists with vested interests subvert regulation,” says Claire Bleakley.
"The compromised position of AgResearch biotechnology programme managers shows that the public will never be given
honest answers to their questions. It also raises the need to investigate if they are withholding more information that
does not forward their agenda and may be putting the national interest at risk."
“The Minister cannot allow this programme to continue given the managers have shown themselves inadequate to meet their
responsibilities, and as lacking the necessary scientific expertise. Despite the danger to our economy from escaping GE
material these cruel experiments have produced no results from the millions of taxpayer dollars draining from New
Zealand's limited R funds," said Ms Bleakley. .
We ask that the Minister, who is looking into our concerns over the facility, hasten to look into this serious cover up
of information and to prevent vested interests being allowed to endanger our economy. We also ask that he re-instate a
robust independent environmental HGT testing regime that was removed by ERMA, who never were presented with this report
for evaluation.
ENDS