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* Public bite back in GM trade war
* Corn dumped outside US embassy in Athens in GM protest
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Public bite back in GM trade war
Sep 11
http://www.foe.co.uk/resource/press_releases/public_bite_back_in_gm_tra.html

Stakes were raised today in the Europe-US trade dispute over genetically modified (GM) food and farming as a new alliance of civil society groups pledged to create an unprecedented mass citizen objection to the dispute [1].

The organisations involved [2], spanning more than 140 countries, aim to collect objections from citizens from all 146 World Trade Organisation (WTO) member countries, as a challenge to the WTO's secretive trade dispute mechanisms.

The groups representing consumers, environmentalists, farmers, trade unionists and developing countries, launched their campaign on the day the United Nations Biosafety Protocol [3] regulating GM food worldwide comes into force, September 11, 2003.

The new campaign launched today - `Bite Back:WTO hands off our food'- invites the public to make their own legal submissions to the GM dispute in the form of a citizen's objection [4], insisting that the WTO must respect people's right to choose what they eat and allow them to protect their environment.

The WTO, currently holding its 5th Ministerial Meeting in Cancun, promotes its disputes mechanism as its most individual contributionto the stability of the global economy.However it is conducted in secrecy with no access to the general public.The `Bite Back` campaign (online at www.bite-back.org[1]) will directly challenge this and put the WTO inadequacies in dealing with food in the public spotlight.

If the WTO deems that the European Union (EU) is breaking trade rules it will allow the US to force Europe to approve more GM foods and crops - or face huge financial penalties.

The Biosafety Protocol is the first treaty that officially seeks to protect biological diversity from the potential risks posed by GM.It will require all exporters of GM which are to be released into the environment to take measures to prevent the contamination of GM seed products by implementing an `identity preservation' system.It also allows countries to take a precautionary approach if faced with scientific uncertainty over the impacts on the environment.

Friends of the Earth Policy and Campaigns Director Liana Stupples said:

The US Administration, lobbied by the likes of biotech giant Monsanto, is using the undemocratic and secretive WTO to force feed the world genetically modified foods.The public should have the right to decide what they eat.Decisions about our food should not be made by the WTO or by Monsanto.It is clear that the WTO is neither fit nor independent enough to judge whether or not the public should eat GM foods."

Notes to Editors:

[1] After the US, together with Canada and Argentina, submitted a complaint to the WTO over the EU's de facto moratorium on GMOs, the WTO established a panel on 29 August.The US and EU are now preparing their submissions.A verdict is expected for spring 2004.

[2] The campaign was launched by Friends of the Earth International with support of Jose Bove's Confederation Paysanne, Vandana Shiva's Research Foundation for Science, Technology Ecology, Lori Wallach's Public Citizen, the trade union network Public Services International, the International Gender and Trade Network and more

[3] information on the Biosafety Protocol at:
www.foeeurope.org/biteback/download/factsheet_biosafety_protocol.pdf

[4] The citizen's objection is a legal submission to the WTO.In general there is great resistance by WTO Members to intervention of non-members in their disputes.
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Greenpeace dumps corn outside US embassy in Athens in GM protest
ATHENS (AFP) Sep 10, 2003
 http://www.terradaily.com/2003/030910160510.uio3bjgg.html

Greenpeace activists Wednesday dumped some 100 kilogrammes (220 pounds) of US-grown corn over a mock toilet in front of the US Embassy in Athens in a protest against genetically modified foods.

"The Greenpeace action took place outside the US embassy because its government is pressuring ... farmers and consumers worldwide to cultivate and consume genetically modified (foodstuffs)," the Greek wing of the environmental group said in a press release.

Twelve Greenpeace activists staged the protest, spilling the corn over a mock paper toilet.

The action took place as a World Trade Organisation (WTO) meeting opened in Cancun, Mexico. The WTO has agreed to examine a complaint by the US, Canada and Argentina against European Union restrictions on genetically modified foods.
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"We cannot help but perceive that (the) US (WTO) actions are a pre- emptive strike on the Biosafety Protocol and developing country interests... The only African country to support the WTO challenge was Egypt, who soon retracted support on the grounds of consumer and environmental concerns. Developing countries, and African countries in particular, do not want to grow GM crops uncritically and without the due process of their regulatory systems approving them. They will not have their crops contaminated by GM crops... The one important consideration is safety to human health, domestic animals and the environment. This can only be assured, as provided by the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety, only through informed risk assessments and decisions based on the Precautionary Principle" - the director-general of the Ethiopian-headquartered Environmental Protection Authority, Dr Tewolde Egziabher
http://www.bday.co.za/bday/content/direct/1,3523,1426361-6078-0,00.html