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AS SEEN IN USA TODAY LIFE SECTION, WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 2003,
PAGE 6D
Bio-food fight
centers on Africa
Critics, backers see continent as battleground
By Elizabeth Weise, USA TODAY
The United States is taking its fight to win global acceptance
of genetically engineered foods to hunger-plagued Africa.
As President Bush visits five African countries this week, he is
expected to reiterate what he told biotechnology executives two
weeks ago at a conference in Washington, D.C.: Genetically engineered
foods will save millions from starvation.
Anti-biotech groups strongly disagree. Demonstrators at a meeting
of agricultural ministers from developing nations this month in
Sacramento loudly proclaimed that this technology would destroy
African agriculture.
Pro-biotech groups believe the technology will mean that more and
better food is grown on less land, using fewer chemicals and resulting
in less environmental damage. In Africa, proponents look to biotechnology
as a way to develop new varieties of African crops, creating more
nutritious foods that can be grown without expensive and hard-to-get
fertilizers and pesticides.
"I know some people will say it is harmful, but they have not
proved that. That's why we say to the U.S.: 'Give us the technology;
we need it,' " says Peter Rammutla, president of the National
African Farmers Union in South Africa. Rammutla is scheduled to
attend a luncheon with Bush today.
Critics believe the technology is unproven, innately dangerous,
unnatural and potentially toxic to humans, animals and the environment.
They fear that its introduction into Africa will infect traditional
crops with bioengineered traits and leave small-scale farmers beholden
to multinational companies that want only to make a profit.
"They're talking of 'sharing' know-how, donating patents and
so on," says Amadou Cheikh Kanoute of the Consumers International
regional office in Harare, Zimbabwe. "You might forget the
patents for three to five years, and then comes year six and the
multinationals will come back and say, 'We've been putting money
into research and development to come up with these seeds; now you
have to pay for it.' "
That's patently untrue, says Monsanto, the largest U.S. producer
of biotech seed. The company is working on several projects with
African and international agricultural researchers, including disease-resistant
sweet potato, cassava, papaya and cowpeas. Although all are at least
five years from farmers' fields, they are in the pipeline. "For
these projects, we've given them licensing rights for all time,"
the company's Robert Horsch says. "They're free to give it
away."
This kind of back-and-forth has been common in the worldwide debate
over genetically engineered crops since they were first proposed
in the 1980s. Despite the eager adoption of genetically engineered
corn, soybeans, cotton and canola by U.S. farmers over the past
decade, other nations have not embraced the technology so wholeheartedly.
Europe is most profoundly distrustful. Its 5-year-old moratorium
on new biotech products was softened only last week with the passage
of regulations that include strict labeling provisions. China is
eagerly creating its own technology, and the rest of Asia is watchful.
Parts of South and Central America embrace the technology, and parts
revile it.
Africa is only the latest battleground. Last month, dueling groups
of Africans, pro- and anti-biotech, were escorted across the country
to meet with the press and politicians to present their cases.
Earlier in the year, AfricaBio, a pro-biotech non-profit group,
was offering journalists paid trips to South Africa to meet small-scale
farmers who are growing genetically engineered crops.
During a famine in southern Africa last summer, both sides made
much of Zambia's refusal to accept genetically engineered corn from
the USA.
Many believe that European environmental groups opposed to genetically
engineered crops convinced African leaders that if they accepted
biotech corn, the European Union would no longer import any of their
agricultural products.
The conflict is not just scientific; it's also political and even
ideological, says Pedro Sanchez, director of tropical agriculture
at the Earth Institute at Columbia University in New York. Though
he does not consider genetically engineered crops a panacea for
Africa, he says, "there's no evidence whatsoever that biotech
crops do anything different than hybrid corn or any other normally
bred crops."
"All the science is on the side of the American argument,"
says Sanchez, who won the 2002 World Food Prize for his years of
work in Africa on soil fertility and productivity. "In that
sense, Africa is being held hostage by the Europeans. It goes beyond
politics; it's malicious."
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