| GE
Free New Zealand in Food & Environment, 16th
March 2006
NZFSA is called to test for
unapproved GE contaminant in Baby Rice
GE Free NZ has called
for the NZFSA to immediately test Heinz Baby Rice products,
(use by date 12th March 2007), for an unapproved strain of genetically
engineered (GE) Bt rice.
Tests on 19 food
samples containing rice, collected by Greenpeace in Beijing
supermarkets, were recently conducted by GeneScan, an independent
laboratory based in Germany.
The GreenPeace tests
confirmed that the unapproved GE strain of rice, engineered
to contain Bacteria thuriengensis (Bt) genes for insect control,
were present, illegally contaminating the Heinz Baby rice food.
"The NZFSA must
test Heinz Baby Rice for contamination and immediately recall
product if found." Claire Bleakley of GE Free New Zealand
in Food and Environment said, "Babies are the most vulnerable
sector in our community.
Their small bodies are unable to stand up to any toxic challenges
to their immune systems without becoming very sick."
Studies have found
that the Cry1Ac gene, the active gene in GE Bt pollen grains,
provokes a strong immune reaction causing difficulty breathing,
skin rashes, and stomach upsets in farmers living next door
to GE fields.
Since there have
been no approvals for the commercialization or consumption of
the Bt Rice, the Chinese government has permitted only field
testing to date, it appears that the illegal rice has escaped
containment either by
human handling error or pollen spread. This puts all rice from
China under suspicion of contamination by the unapproved GE
Bt strain.
In 2005, multinational
GE conglomerate Syngenta admitted that they mistakenly sold
hundreds of tonnes of illegal unapproved GE BT10 maize, a large
proportion has been exported over the past four years.
"The NZFSA did
not test for the Bt10 contaminant despite repeated requests,"
said Claire.
There have been repeated
GE contamination events, in the USA in 2001, a $1 billion product
recall was issued after concerns of potential allergenic reactions
caused by an unapproved GE Bt corn (Starlink) entered the human
food chain.
In Mexico in 2002,
a centre of biodiversity for maize, testing of 22 varieties
revealed genetic contamination in 15 of them, despite a government
ban on GE planting.
" NZFSA must
act immediately to test and recall any product if found to be
contaminated with the unapproved GE rice".
ENDS
Claire Bleakley
(06) 3089842; 027 348 6731
References: Articles
sourced from http://www.gmwatch.org
http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=6182
Greenpeace
find Heinz Baby Rice Cereal contaminated by illegal GE rice,
14/3/06
First contamination
report: worldwide spread of GE Thursday, 9 March 2006, 9:37
am http://www.greenpeace.org.nz
http://www.greenpeace.org.nz/news/news_main.asp?PRID=898
Dozens Ill &
Five Deaths in the Philippines Dr. Mae-Wan Ho
http://www.i-sis.org.uk/GMBanLongOverdue.php
A blast from a dark
past
The
Mindanao Daily Mirror (The Philippines), Jan 30 2006
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