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the Backgrounder on the Biosafety Protocol |
Who Wants What? | Read the
Letter to President Clinton | Back to Main Safefood Index | Read the
Press Release from 1/25/200
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Press Release
- Contacts: Larry Bohlen:
202-783-7400 x 251
- Sarah Newport: 514-866-8861 (hotel)
- 514-239-4276 (cell phone) or
- For Immediate Release:
- January 21, 2000
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- FAILED WTO NEGOTIATIONS
ON GENETICALLY ENGINEERED FOODS SHIFT TO MONTREAL BIOSAFETY MEETING
KEY MEETINGS OFFER
CHANCE TO ADDRESS VITAL HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES RAISED
IN SEATTLE
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- U.S. opposition to comprehensive
safety rules and enforcement on genetically engineered foods
could kill in an international biosafety agreement supported
by much of the rest of the world. A core controversy is the Clinton
Administration's preference to resolve trade disputes over genetic
engineering at the World Trade Organization (WTO) rather than
in the Biosafety Protocol being negotiated next week in Montreal.
The U.S. delegation may attempt to include a "savings clause"
in the Protocol text that would allow them to bring trade disputes
over genetically engineered organisms (GEOs) before the WTO rather
than the Protocol"s dispute settlement mechanism. Protesters
in Seattle had opposed the narrow "economics-only"
dispute resolution that the WTO has typically provided.
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- According to Sarah Newport,
Coordinator of FoE's Safer Food, Safer Farms campaign, "Environment
and human health concerns must come first and trade concerns
second. The American public cares deeply about protection of
the environment and the US delegation should reflect those sentiments."
- The Montreal meeting taking
place Jan. 24-28 could be the last opportunity for delegated
from around the world to hammer out an agreement on international
rules governing the global import and export of genetically engineered
organisms.
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- Technically, the US is not a
party to the Biosafety Protocol. Nevertheless, the U.S. has obstructed
finalization of the treaty, blocking its final passage in Cartagena,
Colombia last year. Biosafety refers to rules and regulations
that govern the use, transfer and handling of genetically engineered
organisms. Although such rules exist on a domestic level in many
industrialized countries, there are no such rules at the international
level.
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- A strong biosafety protocol
is considered essential by developing countries, many of whom
lack the technical and regulatory capacity to adequately protect
human health and the environment from the possible risks of GEOs.
The Protocol will address such issues as whether or not a country
exporting GEOs should have to first consult with and obtain the
approval of the importing country " a so-called "Advance
Informed Agreement." Key to this issue as well as to the
talks in general will be the scope of GEOs covered under the
Protocol. While the U.S. and a few other large grain and GEO
exporters collectively known as the "Miami Group" are
pushing for a limited scope that would include only those GEOs
intended for direct release into the environment (e.g. seeds
and fish), the majority of Parties to the talks are pressing
for coverage of GEOs that include food, feed and commodities,
and in some cases products derived from GEOs such as food containing
soy or corn ingredients.
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- Larry Bohlen, Health and Environment
Programs Director added, "The Protocol must cover all GEOs,
including commodities. No loopholes or exemptions should be allowed."
- end -
FoE staff from the U.S. and other nations are in Montreal
and available to take calls from the press. A news conference
is planned in Montreal on Wednesday, January 26 and a statement
summarizing the proceedings will be released on Sat., Jan. 29.
For a detailed background paper on Biosafety proceedings, see
www.foe.org/safefood.
- Read the Backgrounder on the Biosafety Protocol | Who Wants What? | Read the Letter to President Clinton | Back to Main Safefood
Index | Read the
Press Release from 1/25/200
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Friends of the Earth
- 1025 Vermont Ave. NW - Washington, DC 20005 USA Tel: 202-783-7400
- Fax: 202-783-0444 - email: foe@foe.org
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