Jamaica Gleaner

Gov’t considers Roundup ban amid cancer fears

- Nickoy Wilson/Gleaner Writer nickoy.wilson@gleanerjm.com

AMID GROWING local concerns over the safety of Roundup, the most popular weedkiller in the world, Agricultur­e Minister Audley Shaw said that an investigat­ion has been launched to determine whether Jamaica should impose a ban on its importatio­n and use.

“It is a cause for great concern and, in fact, already we initiated [an investigat­ion] and requested informatio­n about the extent to which it continues to be imported into Jamaica with a view to banning it ... . It is a potentiall­y serious matter, as you can imagine,” Shaw told

The Gleaner last Friday. Jamaican farmers have been getting increasing­ly worried about whether the glyphosate-based herbicide is safe to use, as the manufactur­er of the weedkiller is once again facing allegation­s that its product causes cancer.

Agro-chemical company Bayer Monsanto was last year ordered to pay US$289 million in damages to an American, 46-year-old former groundsman Dewayne Johnson, who claimed that the

product caused his cancer and that the corporatio­n failed to warn him of the health hazards from exposure.

Speaking to The Gleaner last week, Jamaica Agricultur­al Society President

Lenworth Fulton said that while the organisati­on is particular­ly concerned about Roundup, it is also critical of other chemicals on the market.

“We do not know behind the scenes what is happening. We only see chemicals coming through various companies and they recommend their use to our farmers, so we are in the dark. And I must tell you, I have been the CEO of RADA (Rural Agricultur­al Developmen­t Authority) as well, where we hear [how] farmers suffered from various chemicals, and it has never been followed up to know whether it’s true.

“So it’s very, very important that we have follow-up on these things because the cancer rate in this country is alarmingly high and we have no true informatio­n,” Fulton said, adding that Roundup is the most widely used herbicide in the island.

Tamara Morrison, registrar of the Pesticides Control Authority (PCA), said that the agency is aware of the recent developmen­ts and indicated that a review

of the herbicide is pending.

She said Jamaica cannot arbitraril­y place a ban on Roundup, which is still available for purchase at farm supplies stores across the island.

“We are also guided by FAO (Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on). They did not ban it widespread. It’s different countries that would have to look at it individual­ly and to see what replacemen­ts there are before they actually pull something from the market. So there are a number of things that go in the review.”

She is urging individual­s who use chemicals to follow the safety guidelines.

“The PCA is guided that the label is the law and the label should be adhered to and proper protective gear should be used when using all these chemicals.”

More than 11,000 people in the United States are suing Monsanto for healthrela­ted illnesses from using Roundup and Ranger Pro.

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