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New York Times exposé on ILSI, the food/ag industry lobby group that poses as a scientific organisation

Over the years GMWatch has repeatedly drawn attention to the activities of the International Life Sciences Institute (ILSI), the food/ag industry lobby group that poses as a scientific organisation. ILSI affiliates have sat on the expert panels of the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) that have given GM foods and pesticides a clean bill of health. They have worked to instal industry-friendly regulatory practices in the EU.

They also dominated the EU taxpayer-funded animal feeding study research projects with GM crops, GRACE and G-TwYST. Both the GRACE and G-TwYST studies found adverse effects in rats fed the GM crops studied, but the study authors downplayed and dismissed them. These effects included significantly higher mortality in rats fed GM maize sprayed with Roundup. The premature deaths were linked to pituitary tumours.

Now the New York Times has published an exposé of ILSI's activities in the food sector – see excerpt below. You can read the article in full by going to the URL below and signing up to a free subscription to the New York Times.

EXCERPT from article below: Over the past decade, ILSI has received more than $2 million from chemical companies, among them Monsanto, which was bought by Bayer last year. In 2016, ILSI came under withering criticism after a U.N. committee issued a ruling that glyphosate, the key ingredient in Monsanto’s weed killer Roundup, was “probably not carcinogenic,” contradicting an earlier report by the W.H.O.’s cancer agency. The committee, it turned out, was led by two ILSI officials, one of them Alan Boobis, the vice president of ILSI-Europe who has done consulting work for the chemical sector.
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A shadowy industry group shapes food policy around the world

By Andrew Jacobs
New York Times, Sept 16, 2019
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/16/health/ilsi-food-policy-india-brazil-china.html
[excerpt only]

When the Indian government bowed to powerful food companies last year and postponed its decision to put red warning labels on unhealthy packaged food, officials also sought to placate critics of the delay by creating an expert panel to review the proposed labeling system, which would have gone far beyond what other countries have done in the battle to combat soaring obesity rates.

But the man chosen to head the three-person committee, Dr. Boindala Sesikeran, a veteran nutritionist and former adviser to Nestle, only further enraged health advocates.

That’s because Dr. Sesikeran is a trustee of the International Life Sciences Institute, an American nonprofit with an innocuous sounding name that has been quietly infiltrating government health and nutrition bodies around the world.

Created four decades ago by a top Coca-Cola executive, the institute now has branches in 17 countries. It is almost entirely funded by Goliaths of the agribusiness, food and pharmaceutical industries.

The organization, which championed tobacco interests during the 1980s and 1990s in Europe and the United States, has more recently expanded its activities in Asia and Latin America, regions that provide a growing share of food company profits. It has been especially active in China, India and Brazil, the world’s first, second and sixth most populous nations.

In China, the institute shares both staff and office space with the agency responsible for combating the country’s epidemic of obesity-related illness. In Brazil, ILSI representatives occupy seats on a number of food and nutrition panels that were previously reserved for university researchers.

And in India, Dr. Sesikeran’s leadership role on the food labeling committee has raised questions about whether regulators will ultimately be swayed by processed food manufacturers who say the red warning labels would hurt sales.

“What could possibly go wrong?” Amit Srivastava, the coordinator of the advocacy group India Resource Center, asked sarcastically. “To have a covert food lobby group deciding public health policy is wrong and a blatant conflict of interest.” ...