The Borneo Post

MPOC lambasts WHO over negative remarks on palm oil lobbying

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KUALA LUMPUR: The Malaysian Palm Oil Council (MPOC) has lambasted the World Health Organisati­on ( WHO) over its claim that the palm oil industry is deploying tactics similar to those of the alcohol and tobacco industries to influence research into the health effects of its products.

Describing a study published by the WHO as biased, MPOC chief executive officer Datuk Dr Kalyana Sundram said the editor of the report had slipped the biased findings through an otherwise stringent peer review process, causing concerns among academics.

The authors from the United Nations Internatio­nal Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF) and the United Kingdom academia cherry-picked their arguments against palm oil to create these sensationa­l effects. Datuk Dr Kalyana Sundram, MPOC chief executive officer

“The authors from the United Nations Internatio­nal Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF) and the United Kingdom academia cherry-picked their arguments against palm oil to create these sensationa­l effects. “Even more troubling is that the WHO, a most respected entity, has allowed itself to become a tool for forces actively manipulati­ng against a proven food commodity that feeds millions globally,” he said in a statement yesterday. The authors of the study, published in the WHO’s bulletin, claimed that they found nine pieces of research showing overwhelmi­ngly positive health associatio­ns, but four of them were authored by the MPOC. Kalyanasai­d back in the 1980s, palm oil was said to pose a risk for heart disease because of its higher saturated fat content and the industry had to step in and sponsor a global research to learn the truth.

“This industry-funded pursuit of the truth is now condemned in the report. The palm oil research outcomes from more than 150 publicatio­ns in health and nutrition science journals rested the fact that palm oil consumptio­n at recommende­d levels of fat intake was not a risk for heart disease.

“The authors convenient­ly ignored key palm oil publicatio­ns in respected journals and cherrypick­ed a handful that fitted their hypothesis,” he said.

Kalyana added that the findings were further supported decades later when a debate on saturates took an independen­t turn and palm oil was proven not to be associated with the risk for heart disease.

He asked for the authors of the article and the WHO to provide evidence to support their claims, adding that the MPOC would give an official science-based response to the article as well as to WHO’s director-general.

 ??  ?? Datuk Dr Kalyana Sundram
Datuk Dr Kalyana Sundram

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