NOTE: Letter to India's Prime Minister from the leading molecular biologist, Dr 
Pushpa Mittra Bhargava, who was appointed by India's Supreme Court to observe 
the functioning of India's apex GM regulatory committee - the GEAC (Genetic 
Engineering Approval Committee).
---
---
December 11 2008

My dear Prime Minister,

I am writing to bring to your notice the dangers of virtually unchecked 
approval of genetically modified crops in the country that is largely serving 
the interest of multinational companies such as Monsanto.   This approval is 
granted, according to the present procedure, by a Committee of the Department 
of Biotechnology (DBT) followed by a Committee (Genetic Engineering Approval 
Committee) of the Ministry of Environment and Forests..

There is a public interest petition pending in the Supreme Court (filed by 
Aruna Rodrigues) asking for a moratorium of a few years on the sale of 
genetically modified (GM) seeds and approval of GM crops.   In pursuance of 
this case, the Supreme Court has nominated me to attend the meetings of the 
GEAC, which has made me acutely aware of our failings in the area.

I have provided to the GEAC a list of tests that must be done before a GM crop 
is approved.   However, only less than 10 percent of these tests are actually 
being done before approval of GM crops.   Not only that, in the absence of a 
national facility to do these tests or verify the results of tests done by 
others, the seed companies  are either doing the tests themselves or having 
them done by laboratories in the country *on samples provided by the seed 
companies*.     These laboratories do not have a facility to determine whether 
a seed is a normal seed or  a GM seed.     Therefore, for all practical 
purposes, there is no objective way today to ensure safety of a GM crop before 
it is approved for field trials or commercialization.  We already have 
incontrovertible evidence that a great deal of damage has been done by Bt. 
cotton (the only GM crop released so far, with many others, including food 
crops, in the pipeline) to a section of
 farmers in India,  as well as to farm animals.

Mrs Aruna Rodrigues told me that she had forwarded the list of tests mentioned 
above, that I had recommended to the GEAC,  to randomly selected well-known 
scientists who are experts in the field,  for their opinion, along with a copy 
of the counter-affidavit of the GEAC which said that these tests are not 
necessary (and which also cast personal aspersions on me!)..    She has 
forwarded to me replies from the ten scientists who were approached by 
her.   All of them, without exception, have unequivocally supported my list of 
tests; none of them are my personal friends.  I am enclosing copies of the 
replies of three scientists who are connected with three of the best-known 
institutions in the world.    I would be happy to send your office all the 
other replies  as well.

I, therefore,  agree with the contention of Mrs Aruna Rodrigues in the above 
mentioned petition that  is pending in the Supreme Court, that we should have a 
five to seven year's  moratorium on the sale of GM seeds and the planting of 
any GM crop in the country.    During this period, we should set up an 
appropriate laboratory to carry out all the necessary tests and to verify the 
results of others that may have been carried out.   I have given to the GEAC a 
blue-print of such a laboratory which would easily  take five years to be fully 
operational.  We seek your support to the above proposal.

May I in the end say that as India is primarily an agricultural country,  with 
60 percent of its  population deriving its total income from agriculture and 
agriculture-related activities, it would cease to be a free country if its 
agriculture is brought under the control of foreign
multinational companies through control of seed and agrochemical production..

The marketing of GM seeds by the multinational companies is a step in this 
direction.    What is worrying is that as much as 30 percent of our seed 
production today may be, directly or indirectly, already in the hands of 
foreign multinational companies.   We must prevent this trend.  The proposed 
moratorium would be one important step in that direction.

I will be very happy to see you personally at your convenience
in this regard.

With warm personal regards

Yours sincerely,

(P M Bhargava)

To: Dr Manmohan Singh
Prime Minister of India
7, Race Course Road
New Delhi 110011


Reply via email to