Stakeholders Ask for Review of Biosafety Management Act 2015

Fri, Feb 24, 2017 | By publisher


Environment

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STAKEHOLDERS who attended the one-day meeting on Promoting Biosafety held at BAR HOUSE, Benin City, Edo State, by the Health of Mother Earth Foundation, HOMEF, in collaboration with the Nigerian Bar Association, NBA, Edo State, on February 22, have expressed reservations on the Nigerian Biosafety Management Act 2015. At the conclusion of the meeting, the stakeholders made an 11-point declaration on the need for increased aggressive push of the biotechnology companies in partnership with their local actors in Nigeria to ensure favourable legislations as a step towards unleashing their products and commodities on Nigerians.

The meeting noted that the Nigerian government, in its Biosafety Act 2015 into law, did not take into account the concerns of local farmers and critical stakeholders, contrary to the provisions of the African Union’s Model Law on Biosafety and the Cartagena Protocol. It, therefore, declared that the Act in its current form as lacking in legal safeguards to protect Nigerians’ food culture, environment, ecosystems and human health.

Further, it said there were several fault-lines in the permissive NBMA Act that would necessitate the review of the entire Act and the withdrawal of the GMO permits already issued.

“The constitution of the Board of NBMA makes the agency open to conflict of interests as already seen in the case of a board member (National Bioetechnology Development Agency) teaming up with commercial interests to apply for and receive permits to introduce GMOs into Nigeria.

“That Institutions that are created to protect our environment and biosafety are actually hand-in-gloves with corporations that are trying to flood our country with exotic and risky products and merchandise.

“The National Biosafety  Agency, NBMA, did not take into account the objections and critical concerns submitted to its agency by key NGOs supported by over 100 groups, bothering on health, environmental, socio-economic, technical and administrative concerns before issuing permits to Monsanto Agriculture Nigeria Limited on behalf of Monsanto Company, based in St-Louis, Missouri, USA, for commercial release and placing on market of genetically modified cotton and for the confined field trial of two maize events .

“There is inadequate information and awareness on food sovereignty issues in the media thus shutting out critical stakeholders, deepening public ignorance and inhibiting contributions to solutions,” the meeting declared.

In the same vein, the meeting said that the Nigerian governments had been largely complacent about the covert activities of the biotechnology industry to undermine food sovereignty in the country. Hence, it said: “There is need for a local and national paradigm-shift towards food sovereignty based on local contextual considerations, promotion of small-scale farmers, pastoralists and fisher-folk which have defined indigenous agriculture based on human rights and sustainable natural resource use.

“The mythical benefits of GMOs have been debunked by many experts. For instance a report issued by over 400 scientists and development practitioners from developed and developing countries, under the International Assessment of Agricultural Science and Technology for Development, IAASTD, concluded that small scale farmers should be supported as modern biotechnology would have very limited contribution to the feeding of the world in the foreseeable future.

“Production of GMOs is a threat to our biosafety; poses great threat to human and environment health and severely impedes the attainment of  sustainable agriculture, food sovereignty/security,

“Promoters of GMO and their allies have deliberately ignored the importance and the peculiarities of Nigerian culture, environment and agriculture in their aggressive attempts to impose their products and merchandise on Nigeria. Rather than promoting agroecology, which works in harmony with nature, they have become tied to the apron-strings of speculators and neo-colonial powers whose objective is to exploit, subjugate and destroy food production systems in Nigeria while promoting monoculture and use of toxic agro-chemicals.”

The statement was signed by Ede Asenoguan, chairman, Nigerian Bar Association, Benin Branch; Nnimmo Bassey, director, Health of Mother Earth Foundation and Chima Williams, a lawyer and president, Green Alliance of Nigeria.

—  Mar 6, 2017 @ 01:00 GMT

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