January 12, 2009
India — New research from Austria shows that a commercial strain of Monsanto-made GE corn causes mice to have fewer and weaker babies. What is this doing to human fertility?
China approved the GE corn for animal feed back in 2005.
Until this research, under the Austrian Ministries for Agriculture and
Health, none of the regulators had seriously questioned the safety of
Monsanto's GE corn.
The biotech industry is playing a game of genetic roulette with our food and
with our health.
The GE corn research
Austrian scientists fed mice over a course of 20 weeks a mixture of 33
percent Monsanto GE corn (NK 603 x MON 810) and non-GE corn.
These mice gave birth to less babies and lighter babies in their third and
fourth litters. Mice fed on non-GE corn had babies as normal.
These differences are statistically significant.
India and GE food
The GEAC(Genetic Engineering Approval Committee), a government body, has
approved large scale field trials for BT corn in three agricultural
universities in India. This corn is the same corn that according to a study
by the Austrian government leads to infertility in the females of the rats
that it was tested upon.
In the light of this latest research, Greenpeace India is urging the
government to put the brakes on GE food.
"Genetic Engineering as a technology cannot be taken as safe without
adequate safety tests" said Dr. Sujatha Byravan, Molecular biologist and
former President of The Council for Responsible Genetics.
GE Brinjal is also in the pipeline, and being considered for approval.
Monsanto’s GE corn hurts mouse reproduction. So what is it doing to human
reproduction?
Considering the severity of the potential threat, Greenpeace is
demanding a recall of genetically-engineered food and crops from the global
market.
a recall of genetically-engineered food and crops from the global market.
http://www.greenpeace.org/india/news/no-need-for-condoms-ge-corn