GE Free New Zealand in Food &
Environment, 26th April 2004
TVNZ guilty of breach of standards: Public misled over GE Moratorium
The Broadcasting Standards Authority (BSA) has found TVNZ guilty of breaching the Broadcasting Act's requirement for accuracy and fairness
during the peak of a debate about the government's decision to end the
moratorium on GM release. However, TVNZ has criticised the BSA's decision
saying that to broadcast a summary of the decision would imply the Minister for the Environment also misled the New Zealand public.
The breach occurred during 'Holmes' October 23rd 2003 which featured a debate
with Marian Hobbs, Minister for the Environment, and Jon Carapiet, from GE
Free New Zealand in food and environment. The BSA upheld a complaint by Mr
Carapiet that TVNZ had breached the Broadcasting Act on grounds of accuracy and fairness. "Having examined the
evidence the BSA has upheld my complaint," says Jon Carapiet.
"But frankly it would have been better for
this country if the truth had been heard at the time, rather than six
months later." "In my view the comments made by Paul Holmes and the Minister were indeed likely to mislead viewers, and designed to bolster
the government's argument," says Mr Carapiet. "The Minister was either
ill-informed or ignoring the crucial evidence that New Zealand should not
release GE food or animal-feed products at this stage." The decision to
end the moratorium on GE release was the cause of the largest demonstrations seen in New Zealand for decades but at the time the
government refused to extend the moratorium claiming scientific and other
research backed their move.
During the 'Holmes' interview one such
research report was cited as proving the government's decision was correct, and described as showing European markets were
unconcerned by GE release in New Zealand In what appears to have been a prior agreed plan,
Paul Holmes and the Minister both focussed on the report by the Otago
University Business School: 'Trust and Country Image.
"They seemed to be spinning the Report's findings along similar lines, and attacking me for
pointing out the Report's actual recommendations. Mr Holmes said the study
showed European importers didn't care about GM which is simply not true,"
Mr Carapiet says. In referring to the Otago Report Marian Hobbs even
dismissed our 'clean green image' as unimportant, claiming it was only
hygiene and proper regulation that really benefited New Zealand exports.
"The Otago Report is deeply flawed and it's methodology suspect. The
researchers seem to have deliberately set out to find evidence to counter
claims that exports to Europe could be undermined by GE release, which is
hardly an objective approach. No wonder the Minister seized upon it," says
Mr Carapiet. The Otago Report also neglected to interview consumer groups.
One of its conclusions was that New Zealand's Nuclear Free policy had no
relevance to customers overseas because only 3 company executives, of a
total of less than 20 interviewed, were aware of the policy. But despite
any attempt to disprove concerns about GE release, the final page of the
Otago Report makes a clear recommendation, which both the Minister and
Paul Holmes denied during the interview: " New Zealand should defer commercial release of GMO's ( Genetically Modified Organisms) in farm
animals for meat or milk production, and for pasture and animal feed,
until such time as this technology becomes widely accepted in European
markets.
" Page 78 " Trust and Country image" The BSA found Mr Carapiet was
treated unfairly when he cited this conclusion. Fortunately despite the
end of the moratorium there has been no full commercial GE release authorised in New Zealand. Though field trials have been approved New
Zealand's food production is still GM-free. This protects access for
our Farmers' products to Europe where new rules for full mandatory GE-food
labelling have just come into force.
Most Australian states have
introduced moratoria on GM food crops since New Zealand's moratorium
lapsed. Overseas other regions are introducing bans on GM crops, and
even after getting approval Bayer has cancelled the release of what was to be
Britain's first GM crop. "We are going in the wrong direction. It is time
to reintroduce a moratorium on release,” says Mr Carapiet. "In the light
of the BSA decision and the broadcast of inaccuracies that may well have
misled the people of New Zealand- Minister Hobbs must be called to account."
Contact Jon Carapiet 09 815 3370
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