Tech | January 02, 2012 | 22 comments

Peru's moratorium on GM crops comes into law

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JanforGore
Earlier this year, the administration of the outgoing Peruvian President slipped in a decree that opened the door for GM seeds. But the subsequent outcry forced not only the resignation of the Agriculture Minister who'd introduced the decree, but also a 10-year ban on GMOs. But that ban wasn't signed into law by the outgoing Administration, so in November the new Peruvian Congress overwhelmingly approved the ban once again. Now the new law has been published in the Official Gazette with the support of the new Peruvian President, a known opponent of GMOs.
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Peru Approves Moratorium on GM Crops

THIRD WORLD NETWORK BIOSAFETY INFORMATION SERVICE

Dear Friends and colleagues,

Below is an unofficial translation of a news article on the topic published in Spanish. For more news on the moratorium, see:
http://www.portafolio.co/internacional/peru-prohibio-las-semillas-transgenicas-s...
http://elcomercio.pe/politica/1345718/noticia-peru-libre-transgenicos-proximos-d..."

With best wishes,
Third World Network
131 Jalan Macalister,
10400 Penang,
Malaysia
Email: twnet@po.jaring.my
Website: www.biosafety-info.net and www.twnside.org.sg
To subscribe to other TWN information lists:www.twnnews.net
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Peru approves law banning GM production for 10 years

Peruvian President Ollanta Humala and Congress have heard the cries of Peruvian farmers and have banned GMOs for ten years.

The effects of GM foods on people who consume them and on their crops have generated enormous controversy. In this light Peru has taken an important step to protect their local food producers, establishing a moratorium on income and production of genetically modified organisms. This law, which was approved on November 4, was published on December 9 in the Official Gazette.

The president of Peru, Ollanta Humala said that it came to this decision after hearing "the cries of agricultural organizations and civil society to take this important step in the defense of our biodiversity."

Living modified organisms (LMOs) for research are excluded from the norm, including those used as pharmaceuticals and veterinary as governed by specific rules.

Also the LMO or its derivatives for food imported for direct human and animal, or for processing, said the rule would fall in this first group of processed foods such as dairy meal, which have been manufactured using GMOs.

Congressman Jaime Delgado, who was the driver of the rule, said in a statement that the law establishes the moratorium in response to the need to avoid irreparable damage to the country's biodiversity and to achieve a prior environmental land.

The National Convention of Peruvian Agriculture (Conveagro) also welcomed the enactment of the law and that Humala has taken the decision "without yielding to pressure from powerful groups." In a statement, Humala said he "heard the cries of agricultural organizations and civil society to take this important step in the defense of our biodiversity."

The president of Conveagro, Lucila Quintana, said: "Now we have to tap the potential of Peru's diverse agriculture, food and tourism, as part of a national biosafety work and ensure agricultural production to achieve food security. "
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22 comments // Peru's moratorium on GM crops comes into law

  • alexsmith01
    • +1
      alexsmith01  
    • its true that some GMO have issues but to be fair ALL can foods have cardiogenics in them. also plastics number 4 8 contain it and are not safe for eating out of or microwaving but you all still do.

      our food system already has more then 10 red flags a year and that does not include GMOs.

      i am not for a out right ban on GMO as if all are bad when the facts say other wise. testing study's and research is needed.

      i fear that because we had 1 or 2 bad GMO that all GMO are labeled as bad when there not. also to be fair the biggest problem with GMO is how they are put into crops. GMO use a virus warped in the GMO changes the virus attacks it and that's how the GMO gets inside. that's hands down the biggest problem of GMO, yet no one here is talking about that.

      we GMO our cow pig chicken sperm to produce male female or to produce other changes. most farms been doing that for at least 6 years. a few years back milk was super cheap, this was because most farmers where using sperm with the y missing so it has a 99.9% chance of having a female for dairy. how did we solve this issue? the usa started a buy back program and bought 1000s of them and they will killed to remove the flood of milk into the market.

      ask questions dammed answers but don't fear what you don't know and don't let fear push you into submission.

    • 5 months ago
  • JanforGore
  • PetEr_Alan_ColE
  • JanforGore
    • +2
      JanforGore  
    • PetEr_Alan_ColE:

      Peru isn't the only country either. Hungary pulled all of their BT maize out and the president of Poland has stood up to it as well as others. Monsanto is being sued for biopiracy in India, and in Australia for transgenic contamination of certified organic crops that have ruined livelihoods. It's only in this country where we see total allegiance to the military industrial complex of industrial agriculture to which Monsanto and DOW are party to in their war against nature. No wonder any discussion of it here is ignored as well now that someone who supports it was given a show here and probably isn't allowed to mention them...

    • 5 months ago
  • PeteLeS33
  • PetEr_Alan_ColE
    • +1
      PetEr_Alan_ColE  
    • PeteLeS33:

      Sadly, we are going in the opposite direction.
      In 2003, countries that grew 99 % of the global transgenic crops were the United States (63 %), Argentina (21 %), Canada (6 %), Brazil (4 %), China (4 %), and South Africa (1 %) and today the Grocery Manufacturers of America estimate that 75 % of all processed foods in the U.S. contain a GM ingredient.

      Between 1995 and 2005, the total surface area of land cultivated with GMOs had increased by a factor of 50, from 17,000 km² (4.2 million acres) to 900,000 km² (222 million acres), of which 55 percent were in Brazil.

      In the US, by 2006 89 % of the planted area of soybeans, 83 % of cotton, and 61 % maize were genetically modified varieties.

      Disabled World - Disability News for all the Family: http://www.disabled-world.com/fitness/gm-foods.php#ixzz1iOPiMHUc

    • 5 months ago
  • JanforGore
  • PeteLeS33
  • PeteLeS33
  • Wyley_Wombat
  • JanforGore
    • +2
      JanforGore  
    • Wyley_Wombat:

      It's spreading. Regardless of the Monsanto/DOW/Bayer triumvirate's cozy relationship with certain entities here, people on the whole in this world refuse to have this poison shoved down their throats.

    • 5 months ago
  • Anonmaly
  • JanforGore
  • coolplanet
  • JanforGore
  • coolplanet
  • treewolf39
  • JanforGore
  • Vierotchka
  • JanforGore
    • 0
      JanforGore  
    • Vierotchka:

      And I bet not one election taking place in this country will have one candidate even saying the letters GMO (save for Dennis Kucinich) or the words Monsanto or DOW. Just shows this is so prevalent on both sides. What a joke.

    • 5 months ago
  • Vierotchka
    • 0
      Vierotchka  
    • JanforGore:

      Is there the possibility, in the US, for the people to launch an "initiative" against GMOs and including the names Monsanto and DOW, initiative which the governing bodies (both houses) have to consider and put to the vote in every state if enough signatures are gathered to back the initiative, the way the people in Switzerland can?

    • 5 months ago
  • JanforGore
    • +7
      JanforGore  
    • THIS IS GOOD NEWS. BAN GMOs.

      If politicians here are not going to do the right thing by labelling them, then we will simply have to work to ban them and pull them out of the ground.

    • 5 months ago
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