WordType Designs
Driven To Distractions©
The Sound of One Hand Clapping©


A rchive Date
[ 23-06-2003 ]
Category
[ Science ]
sub-Categoy
[ Biotechnology ]

      [
      http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/World/2003/06/23/118108-ap.html

      U.S. hails genetically modified food as a tool to reduce global hunger
      By KIM BACA
      Mon, June 23, 2003

      SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - An international biotechnology conference began Monday with the U.S. agriculture secretary hailing genetically modified food as a tool to reduce global hunger and demonstrators outside decrying it as a health threat.

      Eleven protesters were arrested as more than 1,500 people marched in the streets of the state capital at the start of the three-day event. Secretary of Agriculture Ann Veneman told agriculture ministers, scientists and health care experts from 120 countries that biotechnology can help developing countries reduce hunger while improving nutrition and their economies.

      "Biotechnology is already helping both small and large-scale farmers around the world by boosting yields, lowering costs, reducing pesticide use and making crops more resistant to disease, pests and drought," Veneman said.

      Demonstrators claim biotechnology is not the antidote to complex global food problems and say the conference is a means for the United States to lower trade barriers and expand the use of genetically altered crops.

      They rallied on the steps of the state Capitol under the scrutiny of hundreds of police and California Highway Patrol officers and then spread out through downtown. Eleven protesters were arrested by midafternoon, said Sgt. Jim Jarofick, who had no information on possible charges.

      Demonstrators included chefs in aprons and white hats banging utensils on saucepans, as well as activists dressed as giant ears of corn, butterflies and tomatoes. Protesters carried large puppets, signs such as "Feed the needy, not the greedy," and trumpeted urban food programs, veganism and organic farming.

      The conference, sponsored by the Agriculture Department, is focusing on farming methods, irrigation and pest management to help developing countries cut world hunger by 2015, a goal set by agriculture secretaries at the World Food Summit last year. More than 800 million people face chronic hunger or malnutrition.

      The debate over genetically modified foods is intensifying, with the United States demanding that the World Trade Organization force the European Union to end its ban on genetically modified food. EU ministers did not attend the conference.

      The Agriculture Department has closed the conference to the public and certain events to the media, citing security reasons.
                    ]


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