Capping a decade-long battle, private companies in Mexico have begun the first legal plantings of genetically modified (GM) corn, the Department of Agriculture said on Wednesday.
Environmentalists and farm groups said they had filed an appeal with the Inter-American Human Rights Commission, arguing the government had been unwilling or unable to halt the illicit spread of GM crops in Mexico, the birthplace of corn.
They said the government shouldn’t authorize legal plantings until it had investigated contamination from past, illicit biotech planting.
In a written response to The Associated Press, the agriculture department said planting had begun on some of the two dozen experimental plots granted approval late last year. They are mostly in Sinaloa and Sonora, northern states that government studies say are likely outside corn’s “birthplace” region in central Mexico.
Opponents say modified genes could spread and contaminate genetically valuable native varieties, from which modern corn was first hybridized between 6,000 and 8,000 years ago. The native genes could be needed someday to help strengthen hybrids.
GM supporters say the genetic contamination theory has been overblown and that such crops can safely be planted in areas where corn is not native. Current law allows only carefully controlled planting in areas far from the central highlands, until the risk can be assessed.
Florencio Cruz Cortes, a Raramuri Indian farmer who says his small communal farm in the mountains of northern Chihuahua state has been planting corn “forever,” claimed contamination has already happened.
“The corn was coming up different, it had changed,” Cruz Cortes said of the 2004 crop in the hamlet of El Consuelo, Chihuahua. “It was smaller. It was no good anymore.”
Cruz Cortes’ community joined Greenpeace Mexico and several other environmental and farm groups on Wednesday in announcing the complaint filed with the rights commission — an arm of the Organization of American States — against several Mexican agencies.
The suit argues the government violated the human, economic, social and cultural rights of farm communities and consumers by failing to investigate widespread illegal planting of biotech corn starting in the early 2000s.
None of the agencies named in the suit could cite a single arrest or prosecution for illicit use of biotech seed, though government investigations show it has happened.
“We have had to take this to an international tribunal to demonstrate the lack of action on the part of the Mexican government in the face of the illegal introduction and planting of genetically modified corn,” said Pedro Torres, president of Democratic Farm Workers Front.
The military is to begin conscripting civilians next year, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet said yesterday, citing rising tensions with Thailand as the reason for activating a long-dormant mandatory enlistment law. The Cambodian parliament in 2006 approved a law that would require all Cambodians aged 18 to 30 to serve in the military for 18 months, although it has never been enforced. Relations with Thailand have been tense since May, when a long-standing territorial dispute boiled over into cross-border clashes, killing one Cambodian soldier. “This episode of confrontation is a lesson for us and is an opportunity for us to review, assess and
The United States Federal Communications Commission said on Wednesday it plans to adopt rules to bar companies from connecting undersea submarine communication cables to the US that include Chinese technology or equipment. “We have seen submarine cable infrastructure threatened in recent years by foreign adversaries, like China,” FCC Chair Brendan Carr said in a statement. “We are therefore taking action here to guard our submarine cables against foreign adversary ownership, and access as well as cyber and physical threats.” The United States has for years expressed concerns about China’s role in handling network traffic and the potential for espionage. The U.S. has
IDENTITY: A sex extortion scandal involving Thai monks has deeply shaken public trust in the clergy, with 11 monks implicated in financial misconduct Reverence for the saffron-robed Buddhist monkhood is deeply woven into Thai society, but a sex extortion scandal has besmirched the clergy and left the devout questioning their faith. Thai police this week arrested a woman accused of bedding at least 11 monks in breach of their vows of celibacy, before blackmailing them with thousands of secretly taken photos of their trysts. The monks are said to have paid nearly US$12 million, funneled out of their monasteries, funded by donations from laypeople hoping to increase their merit and prospects for reincarnation. The scandal provoked outrage over hypocrisy in the monkhood, concern that their status
The US Department of Education on Tuesday said it opened a foreign funding investigation into the University of Michigan (UM) while alleging it found “inaccurate and incomplete disclosures” in a review of the university’s foreign reports, after two Chinese scientists linked to the school were separately charged with smuggling biological materials into the US. As part of the investigation, the department asked the university to share, within 30 days, tax records related to foreign funding, a list of foreign gifts, grants and contracts with any foreign source, and other documents, the department said in a statement and in a letter to