<http://www.guardian.co.uk/gmdebate/Story/0,,1708375,00.html>

America's masterplan is to force GM food on the world

The reason the US took Europe to the WTO court was to prise open
lucrative markets elsewhere

John Vidal
Monday February 13, 2006
The Guardian

Just a few years ago, World Trade Organisation officials used to act
hurt when described by social activists as irresponsible, secretive
bureaucrats who trampled over national sovereignty and placed free
trade over the environment or human rights. But that was when the
global-trade policeman ruled on disputes that had little bearing on
Europeans.

The WTO court's latest ruling will greatly increase the number of
people who believe the organisation needs radical reform, if not
burial. This week three judges emerged after years of secret
deliberation to rule that Europe had imposed a de facto ban on GM food
imports between 1999 and 2003, violating WTO rules. The court also
ruled that Austria, France, Germany, Greece, Italy and Luxembourg had
no legal grounds to impose their own unilateral import bans. "Europe
guilty!" shouted the US press. "This is glorious news for the Bush
administration," said one blogger.

Actually, the judges said much more, but in true WTO style no one has
been allowed to know what. A few bureaucrats in the US, EU, Argentina
and Canada have reportedly seen the full 1,045-page report, and an
edited summary of some of its conclusions has been leaked. But no one,
it seems, will take responsibility for the ruling, which may force the
EU to pay hundreds of millions of dollars to compensate some of the
world's most heavily subsidised farmers, and could change the laws of
at least six countries that have imposed GM bans.

In fact the US has mostly won a lot of new enemies. Rather than going
away, as the biotech companies and Washington fervently hoped, the
opposition to GM foods seems to have been growing since 2004 when the
case was brought to the WTO. Europe, its member states and its
consumers all rejected the ruling last week, making the WTO look even
more out of touch and incompetent to rule on issues about the
environment, health and consumer choice.

The European commission, which has been trying to force GM crops into
Europe over the heads of its member states, says the ruling is
"irrelevant" because its laws have already been changed. Meanwhile,
individual countries who dislike being told what to eat or grow by the
EC as much as the WTO say they will resist any attempts to make them
accept GM.

In the past few days Hungary has declared that it is in its economic
interests to remain GM-free, and Greece and Austria have affirmed
their total opposition to the crops. Italy has called the WTO ruling
"unbalanced" and Poland's prime minister has pledged to keep the
country GM-free. Local government is even more opposed: more than
3,500 elected councils in 170 regions of Europe have declared
themselves GM-free.

There is little the WTO, the EC or the US can do in face of this
coalition of the unwilling. If the US again tries to impose its GM
products on Europe - as it did in the 90s, sparking the whole debacle
- the attempt will backfire. Europe's biotech industry may now try to
force the EC to use the WTO judgment to get the six countries with
import bans to repeal anti-GM laws, but it will meet an even broader,
more determined movement.

In fact, Washington and the US companies are not that bothered by
Europe's predictable reaction. Europe has all but dropped off the
world's GM map. The companies and the supermarkets know there is
little or no demand for GM crops, and that Europe's subsidised farmers
are reluctant to alienate the public further by growing them.

It is now clear that the real reason the US took Europe to the WTO
court was was to make it easier for its companies to prise open
regulatory doors in China, India, south-east Asia, Latin America and
Africa, where most US exports now go. This is where millions of tonnes
of US food aid heads, and where US GM companies are desperate to have
access, buying up seed companies and schmoozing presidents and prime
ministers.

More than two-thirds of exported US corn now goes to Asia and Africa,
where once it went to Europe. As the Monsanto man said this week about
the WTO ruling: "Our feeling is that it's important for countries
other than the EU to have science-based regulatory frameworks."

Like the tobacco industry, GM companies are now focusing almost
exclusively on developing countries. But here the industry is meeting
stiff opposition from powerful unions and farming groups. Brazil has
caved in, but Bolivia may shortly become the first Latin American
country to fully reject GM. Some Indian states are deeply opposed, and
there have been major demonstrations in the Philippines, Korea,
Indonesia and elsewhere. India's largest farmers' organisation this
week said the result of the WTO verdict would be that the US would
become more aggressive in dumping GM food on to developing countries.

The US maintains that through the WTO it has won a great victory for
free trade, and passed a significant milestone in US attempts "to have
GM crops accepted throughout the world". Perhaps, but the battle is
far from won, and in the meantime anyone opposing the crops is being
reclassed as an enemy of America.

Within hours of the WTO decision, José Bové, the French farmer who has
led European protests, arrived in New York to give an invited talk to
Cornell students about GM food - and was immediately sent back to
France by the US government.

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