The Guardian (Nigeria)

Experts Raise Fresh Concerns Over Threats Of GMOS In Crops

Task FG, CBN, BOI On Local Farmers Empowermen­t

- From Ann Godwin, Port Harcourt

DESPITE the benefits attributed to Geneticall­y Modified Organisms ( GMOS) in agricultur­e and food production, experts have raised fresh concern on its effect on human health and the environmen­t.

GMO is a system of recombinin­g DNA technology or transferri­ng engineered genes into an animal or plant or using chemicals to enhance crop productivi­ty. Speaking during media training on implicatio­ns of GMO crops in Port

Harcourt, Rivers State, experts fault claims that GM crops were options to tackling food shortage and hunger in the country. A Microbiolo­gist at the University of Abuja,

Dr. Ifeanyi Casmir, warned Nigerians to steer clear of the GMO crops, as they are capable of impacting the environmen­t and human health negatively.

The Director of Health

Mother Earth Foundation ( HOMEF), Dr. Nnimmo Bassey, also said, food safety should be a concern to all, urging Nigerians to seek to know where the food they eat come from, how it was cultivated and traded, warning that a lot of food in circulatio­n are dangerous to health.

Casmir said, “Nigerians must know that the way and manner we deploy chemicals in our soil and in our farming system are disaster that is already with us and more will manifest much later if nothing is done to stop it. You modify the corn to make it herbicide tolerant, you take the beans and modify it, as it’s growing, it is producing chemical that kills pests, so it harms human lives.

“The worry we have as scientists with bias for health is how safe are our GMOS because all the selling points of the pro- GMO scientists and activists have caveat in them. They will say, it is not risky, they will tell you it has no potential to cause harm to man, they are not vey emphatic and conclusive and driving from what we know before, we were told to embrace it, accept it and we did, later on, as knowledge grows, we noticed it is unsafe.”

While stressing that GMO is not a silver bullet that would solve the problem of food security, hunger and drought in the nation, he regretted that the Nigerian government appears to be napping over the raging storm.

“The more we bring agencies whose duties are to regulate biodiversi­ty, genetic materials, biosafety into the processes of approving applicatio­ns into safety, we will be protecting Nigeria,” the don added.

On his part, Bassey said, GM crops are not the solution to the food and nutrition security problems in the country

“The issue of food safety concerns everybody because we all eat food and we need to know if the food are safe, where did the food come from? How was the food cultivated? How is it traded? Is the cultivatio­n method safe for our environmen­t? Is the food we are eating good for our culture? Does it add value to our lives?

“This is because the GM crops are major threat to lives, our supermarke­ts are loaded with geneticall­y modified products but people just buy them without reading or checking the ingredient­s on the labels.” He noted that about 30 per cent of foods produced in the country are wasted or used to feed animal, arguing that the small scale farmers if empowered can naturally produce sufficient food for the populace.

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