Ministry Passes Buck to Disputes Committee On GE Food
Ministry Passes Buck to Disputes Committee On GE Food
The Ministry of Primary Industries (MPI) has
advised GE-Free NZ that the best avenue to express concerns
about how GE foods are scientifically assessed is through
the Regulatory Disputes Select Committee.
The
responses allows the Ministry to sidestep issues raised by
GE Free NZ and four other Australian groups in a joint
submission made to the Food Standards (FSANZ) Authority
concerning the absence of any evidence on the safety of Dow
Agrochemical's multi-herbicide (2,4-D, Glyphosate,
Glufosinate) tolerant GE soybean [1] for entry into the food
chain.
By suggesting a Select Committee should
consider current serious failings in scientific assessment
of GE food, the Ministry is ignoring its responsibility for
erroneous decisions that are being made right now.
Over
30,000 pages of information on the new GE soy that was
provided to GE Free NZ under the Official Information Act
show evidence that the soybean contained a lower level of
vital nutrients than the non-GE parent line and that even
after cooking the transgene was not destroyed.
The
high levels of anti nutrients could further affect the
absorption of vital nutrients leading to toxicity. However,
there were no feeding studies on the soy to see if these
changes caused harm if eaten.
"The need for long
term feeding research to assess safety is now established.
The Ministry has no justification in ignoring this
fact," says Jon Carapiet, national spokesman for GE-Free NZ
in food and environment.
In 2012 the first ever
life time study by a French team at CRIIGEN found that
feeding laboratory animals GE maize tolerant to RoundUp,
seriously compromised the immune system and vital organs,
liver and kidney, of the animals [2]. They also detected an
increased level of endocrine related tumours in rats fed GE,
and these started when the rats were only four months
old.
FSANZ [3] and the Minister in charge of Public
Health, Kate Wilkinson have dismissed Seralini's findings
saying the study had many deficiencies, methodological and
interpretive limitations. They are wrong to have done
so.
“The study showed serious adverse effects on
animals eating this corn, and demands comprehensive further
research. This is the first time that a lifetime study has
been completed on any mammal," says Claire Bleakley,
president of GE Free NZ in food and environment.
“This
makes us wonder whether the Minister is being briefed
properly on the dangers of GE foods, or if she is being
misinformed in order to avoid obstacles to
trade.”
On January the 15th the CRIIGEN team
will be delivering their raw data to a notary of the
European Parliament and they have said they would make the
data public “as soon as the regulatory agencies or
Monsanto do the same for their data, or when governments
consent to publish the industry data”.
“We
ask the ESR and MPI to consult with the European Parliament
so that they can properly brief the Minister whose duty it
is to authorise GE foods," says Claire
Bleakley.
"Without long term feeding studies on this GE soy’s effects the Minister cannot approve it as safe to eat."
ENDS