Philippine Daily Inquirer

Irri exec: Attack vs GMO testing ‘shortsight­ed’

- By Maricar Cinco

LOS BAÑOS, Laguna—A top member of Internatio­nal Rice Research Institute (Irri) expressed his disappoint­ment over the data they had lost after a group of anti-GMO (geneticall­y modified organism) activists stormed and uprooted crops from a field testing site of Golden Rice in Camarines Sur.

Dr. Bruce Tolentino, Irri’s deputy director general of communicat­ions and partnershi­ps, said the field trial of Golden Rice was now on its third and final cycle but Thursday’s attack only caused “delays to research results [and] just made things more difficult.”

“What happened was a large group that had been gathered together by elements we don’t really know entered the rice field where experiment­s were taking place,” Tolentino said on the sidelines of “Women in Rice Farming,” a joint activity of Irri, the Philippine Commission on Women, and the Department of Agricultur­e (DA) that was meant to enhance the role of women in agricultur­e.

In a statement issued on Friday, Irri said the activists vandalized its 1,000-square-meter field testing site located within DA’s Regional Field Unit 5 Bicol Experiment Station in the town of Pili in Camarines Sur province.

The Pili site is one of the five locations allotted for the field trial of Golden Rice, a new variety of rice geneticall­y engineered to produce beta-carotene.

“Nearly all plants were uprooted and left on site. The trial cannot be continued and we are now conducting cleanup activities and reporting,” the statement read. No one was hurt in the incident.

The militant farmers’ group Kilusang Magbubukid ng Bikol and Sararong Inisyatiba nin Kahinwanma­an na Wasakon ang Agrokemika­ls na LasongGMO (Sikwal-GMO) owned up the “surprise attack” on Thursday morning by about 400 farmers from Camarines Sur, Camarines Norte and Sorsogon.

Sikwal-GMO coordinato­r Bert Autor said the farmers uprooted the Golden Rice crops “in 15 minutes” after the protesters made their way past 30 policemen, who tried to stop them from entering the rice field.

The groups opposed the use of genetic modificati­on due to its alleged threats to biodiversi­ty and human safety.

Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas deputy secretary Wilfredo Marbella, in the same SikwalGMO statement, said the produc- tion of Golden Rice would only give transnatio­nal agro-companies the control and patent over the seeds and rice varieties.

“That’s really shortsight­ed because all we want is to complete the research [and] answer the questions that we’re all interested in,” Tolentino said.

Tolentino said that through genetic modificati­on, scientists take only about two to four years of scientific studies and experiment­s, as compared with the traditiona­l methods that take them 12 years to breed the crops.

“All it does is to speed up the process,” Tolentino said. “I can tell you, we’ve passed all the safety tests [and Golden Rice] is as safe as any other food out there.”

Irri has long been pushing for Golden Rice to fight vitamin A deficiency, which, it said, has affected 1.7 million children (15.2 percent) in the Philippine­s.

 ??  ?? ANTI- GMOfarmers and activists in Bicol staged a surprise attack on a field testing site of Golden Rice in Pili, Camarines Sur, on Thursday.
ANTI- GMOfarmers and activists in Bicol staged a surprise attack on a field testing site of Golden Rice in Pili, Camarines Sur, on Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines