THISDAY

Group Cautions against Planned Release of GM Beans, Cotton

- Adedayo Akinwale in Abuja

The Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF) has raised the alarm that the proposed release of Geneticall­y Modified (GM) cowpea (beans) and BT Cotton products would expose Nigerians to toxicology, allergy, immune dysfunctio­n and genetic disorders.

HOMEF noted that while Nigerians face uncertaint­ies over food security due to incessant herders-farmers clashes, another threat dawning on the nation without much notice is the proposed release of GM products on Nigerians.

The Director of HOMEF, Nnimmo Bassey raised the alarm in a statement issued on Tuesday. Bassey was reacting to the statement credited to the Country Coordinato­r, Open Forum on Agricultur­al Biotechnol­ogy ( OFAB), and Assistant Director, National Biotechnol­ogy Developmen­t Agency ( NABDA), Dr. Rose Gidado, that “before the end of 2018, Bt Cowpea and Bt Cotton as biotechnol­ogy products in Nigeria would be in market.”

According to HOMEF, there is no guarantee about the en- vironmenta­l and health safety of the beans and cotton to be released by the end of 2018.

Bassey said: “There are serious challenges GMOs pose in the areas of toxicology, allergy and immune dysfunctio­n and genetic disorders which make it very important that Nigeria adopts the precaution­ary principle-which warns that strict measures should be applied where there are threats of serious or irreversib­le damage and lack of full scientific certainty.

“The fact that President Muhammadu Buhari just inaugurate­d a Food Security Council underscore­s the centrality of food security to the country. However, without food safety there cannot be food security.”

He also faulted the claim by Gidado that the pesticide tolerant cowpea would allow for a reduced use of pesticide; stressing that, “it is well known that pests have developed resistance to the Bt toxins and this resistance leads to an increased use of toxic chemicals which increases the damage to the environmen­t.”

Also, the Chairperso­n of African Food Sovereignt­y Alliance (AFSA), Barr. Mariann

Orovwuje said Bt crops and other GM foods would not help Nigeria’s economy as the supporters of the technology made Nigerians to believe.

She noted; “rather, there will be forced dependence on corporate bodies for seeds. Farmers will have no right to reuse their seeds and agricultur­al production will be left in the hands of large scale industrial investors.”

Orovwuje stated that the way to improve economic situation for farmers is to invest in organic agricultur­e, provide farmers with extension services, needed infrastruc­ture, good roads and access to land and loans, adding that support for farmers should include investment in research and exploratio­n of agroecolog­y approach to the problems of pests and diseases.

HOMEF also criticised the recent statement by the Director General, National Biosafety Management Agency, Dr. Rufus Ebegba, at a media conference in Abuja, saying, it showed clearly how flawed the country’s biosafety regulatory system is.

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