China Daily

Problems found at GM testing center

- By WANG XIAODONG wangxiaodo­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

Irregulari­ties found in a testing center for geneticall­y modified animals and animal feed has exposed loopholes in the management of genetic modificati­on in China, and deserves caution from authoritie­s for more intensifie­d supervisio­n, according to an investigat­ion.

The irregulari­ties at the Center for Safety Supervisio­n, Inspection and Testing GM Animals and Feeds of the Ministry of Agricultur­e included faking inspection records and using students instead of certified technician­s to conduct tests, the ministry said.

The center, establishe­d by the Institute of Animal Sciences under the Chinese Academy of Agricultur­al Sciences, had not issued any safety certificat­ions for geneticall­y modified products, the ministry said.

It ordered the center to suspend operations and make rectificat­ions in the next six months, and ordered the CAAS to seriously punish those responsibl­e.

The incident attracted public attention after Wei Jingliang, a former Ph.D. candidate at the institute, claimed online on Sunday that the testing center was involved in various irregulari­ties.

Neither CAAS, Wei nor the center responded for comment on Friday.

“The response by the Ministry of Agricultur­e was quick,” said Huang Dafang, a chief researcher at the Biotechnol­ogy Research Institute at the CAAS.

“The incident has exposed management problems of some similar institutes, and serves as a warning,” Huang said.

Those involved in scientific research must strictly abide by profession­al codes, and management should also be strict to ensure that results are accurate and scientific, he said.

“Academic misconduct and improper management in genetic modificati­on in China does exist,” he said. “Related authoritie­s should intensify management in the sector, including of documents and dossiers, to put such testing centers under effective supervisio­n and inspection.”

Meanwhile, the public should not be misled by such incidents to reject geneticall­y modified products, as certified GM foods are safe, as agreed on by internatio­nal academic circles, he said.

Yang Chunxue, a researcher in economy at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told Beijing News that all those involved in the irregulari­ty should be punished, and sound management systems are needed in similar scientific research institutes to prevent reoccurren­ces.

The incident has exposed management problems of some similar institutes, and serves as a warning.” Huang Dafang, chief researcher at the Biotechnol­ogy Research Institute at the Chinese Academy of Agricultur­al Sciences

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