| http://www.sacbee.com/content/business/agriculture/story/6912738p-7862174c.html                       1,000 pack theater for public debate on biotechnology.                     The heavily policed event was spirited but mostly civil.  By Mike Lee -- Bee Staff Writer  Published 2:15 a.m. PDT Tuesday, June 24, 2003Sacramento Bee
  An eclectic crowd of nearly 1,000 filled the Crest Theater                     Monday night for the only public debate in conjunction with                     this week's international agriculture conference at the Sacramento                     Convention Center.  The spirited but mostly civil event attracted approximately                     as many people as the U.S. government-sponsored invitation-only                     meetings of agriculture ministers and showed the depth of                     public interest in genetically modified organisms, or GMOs. Adorned by piercings, body art, bandannas and anti-GMO signs,                     the crowd provided a stark contrast to the dark suits down                     the street.  Attendees paid $5 and put up with a heavy police presence                     outside the theater to listen to six panelists with widely                     divergent views about biotechnology.  David Hegwood, a lawyer for the U.S. Department of Agriculture,                     applauded the attention to issues raised by the international                     conference. "(Biotechnology) is worthy of much more debate                     of this kind," he said.  Organized by groups opposed to biotech crops, the forum                     highlighted differences in approaches to the use of genetic                     engineering to alleviate starvation in the Third World.  Proponents of biotechnology say it holds great promise for                     introducing vitamins, vaccines and higher-yielding or drought-tolerant                     crops for developing countries in the future.  Opponents say it's doing nothing now to improve conditions                     for the world's hungry because the technology is locked up                     in patents by a few large companies that don't see commercial                     value in poor nations.  "This whole debate about biotechnology reminds me very                     much of the debate about nuclear technology," said panel                     moderator Mark Hertsgaard, a San Francisco author.  "Each of the technologies has such enormous power for                     good and ill," he said.  Anuradha Mittal, a native of India and co-director of the                     Institute for Food and Development Policy -- better known                     as Food First -- raised the crowd to its feet when she said                     the United States should stop pushing biotech crops as food                     aid to nations that reject it.  "The Third World can think for itself and ... says                     no to genetically modified foods," she said.  Martina Newell-McGloughlin, director of the University of                     California's biotechnology program, said genetic engineering                     won't solve every Third World problem, but that its possibilities                     are too great to dismiss. "The advantages of biotechnology                     for Africa is that it's packaged technology in a seed,"                     she said.  While current commercialized GMOs don't include crops grown                     widely in developing countries, Newell-McGloughlin said university                     research is addressing many crops important to the Third World.  "The real issue is not biotechnology," she said.                     "The real issue is starvation." Silvia Ribeiro, an anti-GMO author and researcher in Mexico,                     responded: "This is not about visions of biotechnology.                     This is about reality."  And the reality, said Ribeiro, is that biotechnology is                     controlled by a few corporations that should not be trusted                     with the food supply of entire nations.
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