WASHINGTON,
August 31 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - The United States has
launched what appears to be a coordinated campaign against
environmental organizations and individuals opposed to
genetically-modified (GM) food, with two top U.S. officials blasting
the groups as "irresponsible."
In
a written statement issued Friday, U.S. Agriculture Secretary Ann
Veneman said the groups were preventing food aid from reaching those
in need, notably in southern Africa, Agence France-Presse (AFP)
reported.
"The
United States remains the leading food aid contributor to the region,
committing about a half of a million tons of food aid," Veneman
said.
"However,
our ability to deliver desperately needed food has been greatly
hindered by individuals and organizations that are opposed to
biotechnology and who are providing misguided statements about the
U.S. food system."
The
verbal salvoes come amid growing controversy over genetically
modifiedcorn delivered to famine-stricken Zambia, which remains in
local warehouses because of President Levy Mwanawasa's steadfast
refusal to release it to the population due to safety concerns.
Friends
of the Earth and other prominent environmental organizations have been
campaigning against GM food, arguing the consequences of its
consumption for people and the environment could be unpredictable.
The
agriculture secretary said the food aid offered by Washington to
southern Africa is the same food Americans eat every day, and the U.S.
regulatory process ensures that the supplies reaching people around
the world are safe and reliable.
"It
is disgraceful that instead of helping hungry people, these
individuals and organizations are embarking on an irresponsible
campaign to spread misinformation and create an atmosphere of fear,
which has led countries in dire need of food to turn away safe,
wholesome food," Veneman said.
The
harsh comments echoed those of Andrew Natsios, administrator of the
U.S. Agency for International Development, who was quoted as saying
earlier in the day that environmental groups were endangering the
lives of millions of Africans by encouraging their governments to
reject genetically modified U.S. food aid.
"They
can play these games with Europeans, who have full stomachs, but it is
revolting and despicable to see them do so when the lives of Africans
are at stake," Natsios told The Washington Times.
Natsios
said environmental lobbies use using well-organized propaganda
"the likes of which I have never seen before" in order to
prevent the spread of genetically engineered food.
"The
Bush administration is not going to sit there and let these groups
kill millions of poor people in southern Africa through their
ideological campaign," Natsios said in his interview.
The
administration of U.S. President George W. Bush has had a chilly
relationship with environmental groups from the very start.
The
Greens have been critical of Bush's plan to boost energy production in
the United States and played a significant role in the eventual
killing by Congress of the president's plan to allow drilling for oil
in the Alaska Natural Wildlife Reserve.
Meanwhile,
Food and Agriculture Organization head Jacques Diouf on Friday asked
drought-hit southern African countries not to turn away genetically
modified food aid, saying the best available evidence determined it
was safe.
However,
according to an article published in IslamOnline’s Health and
Science section entitled “Genetically Modified Risq” by Hwaa Irfan
(7/26/02), many GM plants are still in the experimental stages and
actually use more herbicides than their non-GM counterparts.
It
has also been revealed that GM foods are also more expensive to
maintain and utilize more resources to ensure their development than
non-GM plants.
It
is believed that GM foods may cause an array of health problems
ranging from cancers to genetic malformations in humans