» WELCOME
» AN INTRODUCTION
» PROFILES
» LM WATCH
» CONTACT
» LOBBYWATCH LINKS
»


New US call for African leaders to be tried for "crimes against humanity" / more African stories (10/2/2005)

FOCUS ON AFRICA:
http://www.gmwatch.org/africa.asp

Tony Hall, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, has repeated his call for African leaders who refuse the US's GM-contaminated food aid to be tried for "crimes against humanity" (item 2).

When Hall originally called in 2002 for these leaders to be tried, organisations from over 30 different countries around the world responded with a powerful open letter calling for an apology for a "reckless comment" which "reeks of hypocrisy and bad political judgment and has no legal basis in international law". Hall's comment, the letter said, "serves only to further damage the reputation of the U.S. government already suffering for its unilateral, aggressive and abusive foreign policy." (item 6)

But, however ludicrous and inflammatory Hall's comments may have been, it has played its part in a viral marketing strategy aimed at painting the US and biotech as the saviours of Africa and those that raise concerns as villains. This can be seen from item 3 below where the refusal of GM food aid in Africa is listed by an American commentator, in a piece marking the 60th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, as one of many examples of how crimes against humanity continue in the modern world.

The same kind of viral marketing can be seen at work in CS Prakash's piece for the Nigerian press (item 4) with the sub-heading, "Africa needs GMOs to survive the impending continental famine". In his usual shameless manner, Prakash warns that yields of sweet potato in "African nations are dangerously low - in some cases losing up to 80 per cent of expected yields due to the sweet potato weevil and also the feathery mottle virus (SPFMV)". Prakash then goes on to say, "Research is under way on sweet potatoes that produce their own protection against SPFMV".

But the impact of SPFMV has been shown to have been hugely overstated and not even to be the main viral risk for sweet potatoes. And when Prakash says the "research is underway" he fails to mention that it's already been "underway" for over 12 years!
http://www.lobbywatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=131&page=W

Indeed, the GM sweet potatoes have already been subjected to 3 years of field trials in Kenya where they've been found to actually yield less than the non-GM varieties and to be susceptible to viral attack - the very thing thay were created to resist. Prakash had previously repeatedly cited the GM sweet potato as an example of a GM success for Africa!
http://www.lobbywatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=106

The GM project has so far consumed over 6 million dollars in funding and Aaron deGrassi of the Institute of Development Studies has drawn attention to the striking contrast between the unproven GM sweet potato variety and a successful conventional breeding programme in Uganda which had already produced a new high-yielding variety which was virus-resistant and "raised yields by roughly 100%".
http://www.lobbywatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=131

But how the GM hype continues to have its effect, regardless of reality, can be seen in item 5 where a biotech researcher in Uganda, who has just won an award for non-GM work with bannas, laments not being able to work yet with GM bananas because they "will save us from most if not all the diseases, pests and weevils". No evidence is produced to support this amazing claim (item 5) but this kind of fairytale is successfully promoting the technology in several countries in Africa (see item 1).

Several items shortened:
1.Tanzania to grow GM cotton for trial this year
2.Leaders of Zambia and Zimbabwe "ought to be tried for crimes against humanity".
3.Twin Cultures of Death
4.Africa needs GMOs to survive the impending continental famine
5.GM bananas "will save us from most if not all the diseases, pests and weevils"
6.OPEN LETTER to Tony Hall
------

1.Tanzania to grow GM cotton for trial this year
February 8, 2005
Angola Press [via Agnet]

DAR ES SALAAM -- Newspaper Daily News was cited as quoting a government official as saying that the planned GM trials would be carried out in the country's Southern Highland regions where cotton farming was stopped in 1968 in a move to halt the spread of the red ball worm disease that had affected cotton yields.

Wilfred Ngirwa, permanent secretary of the Agriculture Ministry, was cited as saying that Tanzania largely depends on agriculture and cannot afford to be left behind in technology development that increases crop yields, reduces farming costs and augments agricultural profits.

The GM trials in Tanzania will use cotton seeds inserted with a bacterium (baccilus thuringiensis) programmed to kill pests including red ball worms
that try to feed on cotton seeds.
------

2.United States Is Key Provider of Food Aid for World's Poor
(The Washington File is a product of the Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)
Posted by Patriot on 2005/2/10 7
http://www.allamericanpatriots.com/m-news+article+storyid-5997.html

...Hall spoke passionately about the issue of genetically enhanced food and the promise such food holds for feeding hungry people worldwide. Although he acknowledged the political sensitivity of the issue, he termed the use of -- or, more specifically, the failure to use -- genetically modified foods a "moral issue."

He explained that, while Americans eat biotech food every day that is perfectly safe, it is wrong for the leaders in some countries in Africa, such as Zambia and Zimbabwe, to have obstructed genetically enhanced food aid from entering their countries.

"Anybody who keeps legitimate, good food from hungry people
ought to be tried for crimes against humanity," Hall said.
-----

3.Twin Cultures of Death
By Lt. Col. Gordon Cucullu
FrontPageMagazine.com, February 3, 2005
'SEND THIS TO YOUR BRIGADE'
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=16861

We commemorated the 60th anniversary of a crime against humanity by remembering the German National Socialist Party death camps of Auschwitz-Birkenau. It is necessary that the world recalls terrible actions. By recalling, we say, we grow as a human race. By remembering we make certain that these events will not be repeated. At least so we say. But do our actions match our words? The 60th memorial of Auschwitz is an appropriate time to ask this question.

...The continent of Africa has been the scene of one after another ghastly massacres, each with uncountable numbers of casualties. A Wall Street Journal reporter, himself an African-American, wrote that he could determine the intensity of the carnage occurring upriver in Rwanda by counting the corpses that flowed past him. In Zimbabwe an erratic dictators forbad distribution of US food to his starving countrymen because European Greens told him wild tales about genetically modified foods. In Sudan, Somalia, Western Sahara and other hell-holes innocents die by the tens of thousands because of government depravity. Where is the outraged world? The UN only began to act in Darfur because then Secretary of State Colin Powell shamed Secretary General Kofi Anan to accompany him on a visit.
------

4.Genetically modified crops are good for Africa
February 9, 2005
Vanguard (Lagos, Nigeria)
C. S. Prakash
http://allafrica.com/stories/200502080987.html

Africa needs GMOs to survive the impending continental famine.

...The productivity of most African farms is limited by crop pests and diseases. African cassava farmers typically lose 60 per cent of their crop to mosaic virus. Sweet potato yields in many African nations are dangerously low -- in some cases l

Go to a Print friendly Page


Email this Article to a Friend


Back to the Archive