Toxic Rice Floods Nigeria, ERA Indicts U.S.
AKANIMO SAMPSON,
Port Harcourt
FOREMOST
environmental rights advocacy group in Nigeria,
Environmental Rights Action (ERA) has accused the United
States of America (US) of flooding the Nigerian and other
West African markets with contaminated rice.
The
environmental rights group which is also an affiliate of
Friends of the Earth International (FoEI), a global
federation of environmental rights advocacy organisations
based in the US, raised the alarm and the indictment of US
in a statement e-mailed to our correspondent on
Monday.
ERA claimed that the legal action instituted
against Bayer CropScience AG by farmers in the US for
allegedly contaminating their farms with Genetically
Modified (GM) rice seeds in 2006 was a further confirmation
of the validity of tests carried out on rice samples
collected by them (ERA) in Nigeria and other West African
countries within the same period which showed contamination.
More than 1,000 farmers from Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Arkansas and Missouri, have sued Bayer AG, based in Leverkusen, Germany, in a case filed with US District Judge Catherine Perry who is guiding both sides in talks over out-of-court settlements.
Lawyer for
Bayer and attorneys representing Missouri farmers made
opening statements on November 4 to a nine-person jury while
a second such trial is to start in January, next year,
involving farmers from Arkansas and Mississippi claiming
that the export market for their crops was curtailed when
the US Department of Agriculture in 2006 announced that
trace amounts of Bayer's GM rice had been found in US
long-grain stocks.
Reacting to this development, ERA said the US litigation showed the extent the biotechnology industry and its allies will go to "undermine food supplies" to unsuspecting consumers especially in Africa where there are weak biosafety laws.
"While we hail the suits, it is extremely disheartening that these startling revelations have not compelled the Nigerian government to acknowledge the result of the Nigerian tests or put in place effective legal, administrative and infrastructural framework to check the illegal dumping of unwholesome foods in the country," said ERA Executive Director, Nnimmo Bassey.
Bassey noted that the unauthorised distribution of
GMO seeds in any guise voids the precautionary principle and
that the biotech industry and transnational agribusinesses
have over the years pushed GMO to Africa in the guise of
food aid while hiding under the cover of the World Food
Programme (WFP) funded majorly by the US.
Our
correspondent however, reports that after the revelation
that the LLRICE601 had contaminated food supply in Europe
and Japan Friends of the Earth Africa under the coordination
of ERA embarked on monitoring rice supply in Western Africa,
a region that imports most of the rice destined to Africa.
Samples collected from market shelves in Nigeria,
Ghana and Sierra Leone and tested in a laboratory showed
that LLRice601, the same variety that contaminated the US
farms, were in circulation in the countries sampled.
"It is now evident that the US and other GMO producing
countries do not want GMO on their soil but will do
everything to push it down to Africa. ERA reiterates its
earlier and unchanged demand for a prohibition of all rice
imports from the US unless such imports are certified and
confirmed GM-free.
''Nigerians demand that the
Federal Government as a matter of urgency put in place
strict bio-safety laws using the African Model as the
minimum standard to be applied. Anything short of this will
undermine our food sovereignty and the health of Nigerians,"
Nnimmo said.
ENDS