"Stop threatening to overturn other nations food safety laws" 200 groups worldwide tell president Bush
August 14, 2001
"Stop threatening to overturn other nations food safety laws" 200 groups worldwide tell president Bush
Sri Lanka, Thailand
among those targeted by Bush Administration over genetically engineered
food regulations
Washington, DC--More than 200 consumer, farm and environmental groups
worldwide sent a letter today protesting threats by the Bush administration
to challenge food safety laws of other countries as barriers to international
trade. Groups representing citizens in Australia, Brazil, Germany, India,
South Africa, Sri Lanka, Thailand, the United States and Zimbabwe signed
the letter. The groupsincluding the Third World Network, Via Campesina,
Friends of the Earth International, and the Consumer Policy Institute/Consumer's
Union (U.S. publishers of Consumer Reports)represent millions of members
around the world.
The groups called the U.S. threats unreasonable, especially since the
U.S. allows states to establish food safety and environmental laws that
are tougher than national laws. For example, a five-year moratorium on
engineered fish was passed in the state of Maryland last April. Additionally,
U.S. pesticide law allows states to set limits on pesticide use that are
more strict than federal law.
³If a U.S. state can have a moratorium on genetically modified foods,
why can't other countries do the same?² said Ricardo Navarro, Chair of
Friends of the Earth International and a resident of El Salvador. ³The
U.S. has no right to tell Sri Lanka or any other country how to write
their food safety laws.²
Weyland Beeghly, Agricultural Counselor from the U.S. Embassy, New Delhi
publicly threatened in May that the U.S. might challenge a ban in Sri
Lanka of genetically engineered organisms by submitting a complaint to
the World Trade Organization (WTO). The ban is scheduled to take effect
on September 1, sixty days later than planned as Sri Lanka granted a WTO
request to allow exporters time to adjust to the law.
Wichai Chokwiwat, Secretary General to the Thai Food and Drug Administration
told the Thai newspaper, The Nation, on July 19th that his country was
a target of threats to use U.S. trade laws to retaliate against a Thai
proposal made in July to require labeling of genetically engineered corn
and soy crops.
The letter to the Bush administration argues that Sri Lanka and other
nations have a scientific, regulatory and moral basis to set limits on
the
proliferation of genetically engineered organisms.
For more information contact:
Mark Helm
Friends of the Earth
Ph: 01 202-783-7400, or 01 202-270-2650