| more updates... For Immediate ReleaseSeptember 11, 2003
 Historic Cartagena Biosafety Protocol Comes into                     Effect Activists at WTO Meeting Vow to Protect it Against Bush Administration                     Attacks Cancun, Sept. 11- A major environmental treaty, the Cartagena                     Biosafety Protocol, comes into effect today, 90 days after                     receiving ratification by 50 nations. It recognizes the right                     of countries to impose conditions on allowing the import of                     any living organisms that have been genetically modified,                     including a full analysis of the risks that might be posed                     to the local ecosystems and human health. One of the Protocol’s major provisions embodies the                     “Precautionary Principle”, recognizing that a                     country can forbid importation when there is not sufficient                     information or research results to do an adequate assessment.                     The burden is on the exporting company or country to provide                     the proof of safety. The United States is not a party to the Protocol, and has                     stated that it has no intentions of joining it. However it                     appears that the Bush Administration is likely to threaten                     WTO action in order to blunt the thrust of its protective                     provisions. Nongovernmental organizations from around the world have                     vowed to resist any such attempt at international power politics                     that would compromise human well-being and environmental security.                     “We will not let the rules of biosafety in the Protocol                     be undermined by the rules of recklessness and greed on display                     at this WTO meeting” said Vandana Shiva of the Research                     Foundation for Science, Technology and Ecology of India. Because the US government has allowed genetically modified                     crops to be planted, and foods to be consumed, without any                     oversight assessment at all, it has strenuously resisted the                     drafting of the Protocol, and was able to weaken several provisions.                     Given the recent US attack in the WTO on the European Union’s                     regulatory practices for genetic crops (which are generally                     consistent with Cartagena Protocol), citizen organization                     see the Protocol as a welcomed statement that environmental                     and health concerns cannot be relegated to second place after                     short term economic profits. “By means of the Protocol,” notes Philip Bereano,                     who participated in its negotiations on behalf of several                     US group, “countries can use both science and the social                     preferences of their citizens to evaluate this new technology,                     which has received very little scrutiny and is already beginning                     to display troublesome consequences. From :Research Foundation for Science, Technology and Ecology
 A – 60, Hauz Khas
 New Delhi – 110001
 Email: rfste@vsnl.com
 |