June 17, 2004
Source:
Associated Press via
As Reported in the News
Farmers are defying the government
to grow genetically modified cotton in northern India, where
authorities have barred it from being planted, the federal
textile minister said.
Authorities have not yet allowed companies to sell seeds of
modified cotton - called Bt cotton - in the northern
agricultural states such as Punjab and Haryana.
So farmers there have found ways around it, Shankarsinh Vaghela
told reporters in the southern city of Bangalore, reports the
Associated Press.
"Farmers in Punjab and Haryana also want to grow Bt cotton. They
go all the way to Gujarat to buy the seeds," Vaghela said,
referring to the western desert state. "I don't know if it is
illegal. You have to ask the agriculture ministry."
Bt stands for bacillus thuringiensis, a bacterium whose gene is
injected to cotton seeds to give them resistance against
bollworms, a major concern for farmers in India, where the
economy is driven by agriculture.
Bt cotton developed by agricultural biotech giant Monsanto Co.,
based in St. Louis, is the only bioengineered crop allowed in
India. But so far, it is permitted only in six southern and
western states.
The fertile plains of the north that include Punjab and Haryana
have been kept out of genetic engineering. Last year, the
government's regulatory body for the sector, the Genetic
Engineering Approval Committee, refused a strain of Bt cotton
for use in the north, finding that it was vulnerable to another
pest, known as the leaf-curl virus.
Advocates of genetic modification say it helps fight plant
diseases, increase yield and improves nutritive value of food
crops.
Critics counter that the adverse effects of the technology have
not been studied adequately. They say genetically modified seeds
are environmentally hazardous and could contaminate the genes of
native varieties through cross pollination, eventually making
farmers poorer.
Environmental group Greenpeace said Bt cotton cultivation in
unapproved regions is an indication that genetic modification in
agriculture cannot be regulated effectively.
"One problem is the government's inaction and inability to
regulate the cultivation of BT cotton," said Divya Raghunandan,
a Greenpeace campaigner in Bangalore. "The other problem is the
inherent nature of the technology, which cannot be regulated. It
keeps spreading across fields."
Meanwhile, Monsanto said Bt cotton cultivation in the north was
beyond the company's control, reports AP.
"We do not sell the seeds there. If somebody buys from where it
is approved and takes it to the north, it is not in our
control," Ranjana Smetacek, Monsanto's Indian spokeswoman, said
from Bombay.
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