News Note: GE/GMO Starlink Corn Contaminates Food Aid

The Bolivian Forum on Environment
and Development (FOBOMADE), a citizens' group in Bolivia, announced that
a sample of U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) food aid
tested positive for the presence of StarLink genetically engineered corn,
a variety not approved for human consumption due to health concerns. The
group expressed outrage that more than a year after StarLink was found
in the U.S. food supply it has appeared in food aid. They criticized the
USAID and the World Food Program and demanded that genetically engineered
crops not be sent as food aid to countries that have not formulated biosafety
regulations.
The sample sent for testing by
FOBOMADE also contained two other types of engineered corn not approved
in the European Union (EU). All test results were confirmed using DNA
analysis conducted by Genetic ID, an independent laboratory located in
Iowa.
StarLink was not approved for
human consumption due to a finding by the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) that the insecticidal protein the corn was engineered to
produce exhibits "characteristics of known allergens." Possible
health effects of this category of allergen include nausea and anaphylactic
shock, but are not currently known due to a lack of adequate testing by
government and industry. The corn was originally found by Friends of the
Earth and the Genetically Engineered Food Alert coalition in taco shells
manufactured by Kraft Foods.
As a result of the contamination,
the U.S. government recalled over 300 food products and more than 200
people reported illnesses that were possibly related. EPA concluded one
year after the discovery that no level of StarLink could be determined
to be safe for human consumption. The manufacturer of the corn, Aventis,
appealed to the EPA to allow a tolerance level for StarLink in food, but
was denied. The company has since been mired in multiple lawsuits and
has sold its agricultural biotechnology division to Bayer.
In Guatemala, Colectivo Madre
Selva, a citizens' group tested a sample of seed sent as food aid and
found three varieties of engineered corn not approved in the EU.
Centro Humboldt, working with
other members of the Network for a GMO-Free Nicaragua, obtained samples
of seeds from different parts of the country. One seed sample contained
3.8% of a genetically engineered variety approved in the U.S. and the
EU, and three samples of a corn and soy flour blend contained Monsanto's
RoundUp Ready corn.
In a news release dated May 24,
2002, the World Food Program declared that "The WFP does not distribute
food that is not acceptable for human consumption by the citizens of the
producing countries (donor countries) and by the countries that receive
the food assistance." The three largest funders of the World Food
Program are the U.S. (US$796 million per year), Japan (US$260 million)
and the European Commission (US$118 million). In 2000, Dan Glickman, then
Secretary of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, said that the agency
would make sure StarLink did not enter food aid.
Source/contact: Friends of
the Earth, 1025 Vermont Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20005, phone (202) 783-7400,
fax (202) 783-0444, email foe@foe.org,
website http://www.foe.org.
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