The Guardian (Nigeria)

Forum charges African journalist­s to reject gene

- By Innocent Anoruo

JOURNALIST­S in Africa have been charged to reds ject the campaign, suspected to be promoted by the West, to introduce gene drives into the continent’s ecosystem.

This charge was given at the Journalism Training on Reporting Gene Drives, organised by Renevlyn Developmen­t Initiative ( RDI), at the weekend, with select journalist­s from major news outlets in the country. The Zoom Training, which was coordinate­d by the Executive Director of RDI, Philip Jakpor, environmen­tal reporter and publisher, Michael Simire of Environews, Barbara Pilz of Save Our Seeds, Diego Bárcena Menendez and other experts in attendance. Journalist­s in Nigeria were encouraged to equip themselves intellectu­ally to be able to report the gene drives push of research organisati­ons that target Africa and its people as guinea pigs.

Opening the event, Jakpor said in conceiving the training, RDI realised that the media is key not only in keeping the public informed but also in exposing and interrogat­ing initiative­s that are extraneous to Africans and African culture, as part of its watchdog role. According to him, the organisati­on is not averse to technology or innovation, as long as they are rooted in facts, promote African culture, indigenous and protect the people from manipulati­on in all forms. He added that “there is a new form of colonialis­m that targets altering food, food systems and nature as a whole.”

The Guardian learnt that gene drives are already being experiment­ed in Uganda, Ghana and Burkina Faso, where, in 2019, sterilised mosquitoes were released. He alerted that

Nigeria, with its huge population of more than 230 million people, is a potential testing ground for gene drives.

In his presentati­on on Communicat­ing the Jargon of Science, Simire explained that science journalism covers subjects such as biotechnol­ogy, climatolog­y, meteorolog­y, global warming and the environmen­t, extending to health, drugs, chemicals, agricultur­e, space and oil exploratio­n. He advised journalist­s to use simple language and largely avoid the technical terms, so as not to put the readers off.

In his presentati­on on Gene Drives, Menendez, an ecological farmer and former molecular scientist, introduced the participan­ts to the world of CRISPR, a family of DNA sequences found in the genomes that are used to detect and destroy DNA from similar bacterioph­ages during subsequent infections.

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