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Nigerians say no to GMO

Senate slams GM crops as unsustainable and unsafe

Reacting to a news item by Food Farm News published on 5 April 2022, headlined, “Senate insists on GMOs thorough regulation”, groups including GMO-Free Nigeria, Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF), Corporate Accountability and Public Participation Africa (CAPPA), Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN) and others have applauded the Senate for considering a bill to review Nigeria's National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA) Act with the aim of protecting food safety and public interests in Nigeria.
 
Nnimmo Bassey, director of Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF), commented, “This is a huge milestone towards defending the rights of Nigerian citizens to safe food and environment. It is a step in the right direction for consumers and especially for smallholder farmers who are directly impacted by GMOs and associated chemicals, and yet have little or no knowledge or choice about the entry of these unnatural varieties into our food system or of their potential risks. We reject being fed with foods of dubious quality. We have always called on the Government to interrogate the questionable authorisation of crops that would have irreversible impacts on our biodiversity, health, environment, and food safety. We applaud this intervention by the Senate in seeking to enforce law and order with proper regulation of biosafety in Nigeria.”
 
Nnimmo Bassey added that promoting food safety and security/sovereignty is a mandate that rests not just on the Biosafety Management Agency but also on the entire public and thus public opinion must be duly considered in decision making processes concerning genetically modified organisms (GMOs). He added that it should never be forgotten that Nigeria shares extensive land borders with other nations and GMOs allowed into Nigeria are invariably being introduced to these neighbouring nations without their knowledge or consent.
 
Food Farms News had reported that the presenter of the bill, the Senate Leader Dr Yahaya Abdullahi, stressed why the bill for the amendment of the National Biosafety Management Act (NBMA) must be supported for more diligent legislation that would make the country zero tolerant to any hazardous product, such as GMOs, saying the soils and the good health of Nigerians must be well protected with an eco-friendly environment. According to him, "There have not been any conclusive finding regarding overall safety of GMOs on normal lives and environment. So Mr President, my distinguished colleagues, caution must be our watch words in the handling of the GMOs because even as we speak about sixty countries around the world population have partially or totally banned the use of GMOs."
 
The Director of Corporate Accountability and Public Participation Africa (CAPPA), Akinbode Oluwafemi, congratulating the Senate for this bold step, said, “We strongly believe that scientific integrity and social responsibility and accountability are not negotiable, and no technology should be exempted from these values.” He went on to say that those saddled with the duty of protecting our food must look away from the industrial yield-output paradigm and adopt a more integrated, systems-based approach to food and agriculture that takes into consideration many factors, including local food security and sovereignty.
 
He further said, “There is need for very effective independent, credible, regulatory authority to ensure rigorous oversight of GE crops, without the least hint of any conflict of interest. Priority should be given to rural communities, livelihoods, and the interests of resource-poor and marginal small-scale farmers rather than serving corporate interests and their profits. GMOs will bring about seed colonisation, distort our food culture, and foster dependency on local and international corporations. Instead of ensuring the well-being of the people, it only stands to benefit the corporations and their Nigerian cohorts.”

The groups lauded the decision by the Senate, presided over by Senate President Ahmad Lawan and supported by majority of the Senators, in passing the second reading of the bill for an amendment of the NBMA for a more diligent scrutiny of GMOs. According to reports, speakers on the Senate floor were of the opinion that our environment must be of priority and better soil ecosystem management through diligent regulation of GMO seed varieties and other products must be upheld. They added that caution must be central in what is allowed into the country through foreign partnerships, in the interest of the environment and Nigerians' health.
 
Barrister Chima Williams, executive director of Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN), commented that this was a welcome development and that the position of the Senate resonated with what they have being telling Nigerians and the Government for over a decade. “GMOs are regulated because their safety is not guaranteed. There are good reasons why in Europe, robust regulatory mechanisms are in place for GM food and GM crops. GMOS are not the same as natural varieties and they are also not substantially equivalent. If they were indeed one and the same thing, as the GMOs proponents claim, why are they modifying them and why [do they] have patents on them? The claim of substantial equivalence as touted by the promoters of the technology, is an industry get-out tactic to avoid the rigour of proper assessment and regulation.”
 
According to Williams, GM technology has undeniably become associated with profit seeking corporations and rolled out as a tool to further consolidate their dominant market positions and colonisation of our food systems and processes.

“We must consider too that many things that scientists are trying to achieve with GMOs have already been provided by nature and by our local farmers through conventional breeding. We should not accept the proposition that only GM crops and GM food can solve problems in agriculture. Certainly, there is sufficient evidence to show that Non-GMO options and innovations have out-performed the much touted GM options.”
 
Mariann Bassey-Orovwuje, the coordinator for the Food Sovereignty Program of Friends of the Earth Nigeria and Africa and the Chair of the Agroecology and Land Working Group of the Alliance for Food Sovereignty in Africa (AFSA), said, "There are enough reasons to hold back on commercialising GM crops in Nigeria." She urged that the Senate should subject all the GMO crops and food approved for release into the environment to independent, transparent, environmental, social and health impact evaluations. She said that as a matter of urgency they should be subjected to stringent regulatory scrutiny, and they would know that the groups' concerns about them were justified.
 
The groups strongly rejected the non-circumspect modus operandi of the National Biotechnology Development Agency, the National Biosafety Management Agency and their partners to foist GMO crops/foods upon undiscerning Nigerians via their introduction and marketing into the agricultural system and food supply chain.
 
The groups said they have valid concerns about GMOs, and they have compelling and cogent reasons to support their views even though they are constantly being vilified by the promoters of the GM technology. According to the groups, instead of engaging in open and honest debate, they have seen some scientists and promoters of the failed GM technology hardening their positions, lashing out at critics, and promoting personal opinions or parroting corporate opinions and agenda. The group retorted, "We refused to be swayed by industry-inspired lobbying and spin and mere rhetoric designed to shut off debates."
 
The groups equally urged the Senate to convene a public hearing on the bill to allow other Nigerians to add their voices in support of the path the Senate has chosen, by presenting their concerns, views and evidence before the Senate on why there should be stronger and more stringent conditions for admittance of any product that is unknown to Nigerian households.
 
The groups stated, "We need truly innovative and culture relevant systems such as agroecology that protect and enhance ecosystems, support small holder farmers while cooling the planet, increasing productivity, and promoting food sovereignty. Nigerians should support the Senate in the move towards protecting our food varieties and ensuring that GMOs are not forced on our people without their knowledge of what they are planting or eating.
 
"We shall not fold our arms and watch our food and agricultural systems be colonised and destroyed by profit seeking businesses working with public agencies serving unabashedly as middlemen."

Source: Friends of the Earth Nigeria and Africa