>From Ms Kavitha Kuruganti of CSA.
------------------------------------------

Dear Friends

The Animal Husbandry officials of Adilabad district
have to be congratulated for taking cognizance of a serious phenomenon
related to livestock illnesses and deaths happening in many places in
the district after animals graze on Bt Cotton fields. This follows the
inaction of the GEAC [India's apex GM regulatory body] in investigating
such a phenomenon reported from earlier years too and in early February
this year by CSA. GEAC had asked DBT [Department of Biotechnology] to
investigate this last year itself but there are no indications that DBT
has taken up any such studies. Last year, Veterinary Biological
Research Institute [VBRI] has found that pesticide residues were low on
the Bt Cotton samples tested for, but nitrate levels were high.

The
following is the translation of an advisory put out to farmers by the
Joint Director-Animal Husbandry department through the media on
February 20th, 2007, following the incidence of such a phenomenon [the
actual media announcement is in telugu].
***
Media Announcement

It
has come to our notice that in several blocks of the district, animals
are falling sick after grazing on Bt Cotton fields. After harvesting
cotton completely from the fields, there is a long tradition in the
district of grazing animals in those cotton fields. However, because Bt
Cotton is being grown in large tracts and because of a yet-unidentified
toxic material in these plants, it has come to our notice that animals
which are grazing on these fields are exhibiting symptoms like shivers,
convulsions, running nose, bloat, bloody diarrhea etc., and are dying.
Therefore, we appeal to farmers not to graze their animals on Bt Cotton
fields. We request farmer brethren to please do approach the nearest
veterinary doctor and get treatment, if any animal has grazed on such
fields accidentally.

Sd/- M Venkataswamy
Joint Director
Animal Husbandry Dept
Adilabad.
***
Following
the media reports of livestock deaths after grazing on Bt Cotton in
Adilabad district, I went to the district on March 6th and 7th 2007, to
personally meet with the officials and the farmers who were reporting
the problem.

As part of the visit, I went to Kothur village in
Tamsi mandal [block] and met with Mr Jalarapu Namdev whose bullock died
on the 4th of March; went to Talamadugu village (block headquarters)
where I met with Mr Katipalli Dhananjaya Reddy (bullock died a month
ago), with Ms Hussain Bee, whose bullock died ten days ago, with Mr
Katipalli Srinivas Reddy (whose bullocks received treatment that
morning); with Mr Laxminarayan Goud, the Livestock Assistant in the
veterinary clinic run by the department of Animal Husbandry in Devapur
village of Talamadugu mandal; with Ms Lakshmi w/o Indla Shankar of
Pippaldhari  village of Adilabad mandal, whose bullock died ten days
ago. It was also reported that in Talamadugu village, others who lost
their animals in the past one month include Mr Ginnuru Kishtu, Mr
Boriga Mallesh, Mr Nalla Bhooma Reddy and Mr Baddam Kishta Reddy A
bullock of Mr Beer Sab of Laxmipur village also showed severe toxicity
symptoms and was treated by the Livestock Assistant.

I also met:

*Dr Shravan Kumar Kulkarni, Veterinary Assistant Surgeon in Adilabad in the 
Dept of Animal Husbandry,
*Dr M Venkata Swamy, Joint Director-Animal Husbandry, Adilabad district,
*Mr Sayanna, Joint Director-Agriculture, Adilabad district,
*Dr Samuel, Programme Coordinator, Krishi Vigyan Kendra, Adilabad district.

Main
points from discussions with farmers who lost their animals (in Kothur,
Talamadugu and Pippaldhari) as well as dozens of other
farmers/shepherds whose animals have been affected in different ways:

*animals are getting affected in different ways after grazing on Bt Cotton in 
several places
*bullocks as well as goats and sheep are reported to be affected
*symptoms include severe bloat, bloody diarrhea, off-feed, convulsions, 
salivation, respiratory symptoms etc.
*sheep
and goats are reported to have running noses, shivering and cough,
especially during the night after grazing on Bt Cotton fields during
the day

While bloat due to grazing on cotton fields is not an
uncommon phenomenon (which is usually sought to be treated by farmers
themselves with castor oil in warm water fed to the animals), the
severity is high in the affected villages, with the number of animals
affected also quite high compared to negligible incidence in the
earlier years. Few of the deaths reported could not be treated like in
the case of Mr Namdev's bullock in Kothur village while few others died
before they could receive medical attention.

Bullocks which died are valued at Rs. 15000/- to 20,000/- each.

Farmers
who are correlating the problem to Bt Cotton because the animal has fed
on their own Bt Cotton field for a few hours before falling sick
fatally (Mr Dhananjaya Reddy and Mr Namdev) have also reported that
their pesticide use is quite low compared to previous years since pest
incidence has been low this year and that they had sprayed pesticides
like Confidor/Pride/Actara (brand names) in the month of
August/September for the control of sucking pests and not after that.

Farmers
in affected villages are quite sure that this is because of Bt Cotton
and deny that it could be because of cotton crop itself. They say that
in previous years, before the advent of Bt Cotton, their animals used
to graze on cotton during this period and no such phenomenon occurred
then.

The main points that emerged from discussions with Dr Shravan Kumar, VAS, 
Adilabad:

*This "syndrome" has been apparent for about one and a half months now (from 
January last week)
He estimates that around 200 cases have been reported for treatment so far

*He
conducted post-mortem on two bullocks from Talamadugu and sent samples
to Veterinary Biological Research Institute [VBRI] for analysis

The
symptoms reported are an unusual mix of nervous, respiratory and
digestive symptoms; he has been working in the present location for
eight years now and this is the first time he has come across such
cases. He reported that even though such cases were reported in stray
numbers last year too, the department overlooked the syndrome.
It is
not yet clear what toxic material in the Bt Cotton plant is responsible
but the department is taking up symptomatic treatment for now.

It
was found that normal treatment for pesticide poisoning like Atropine
or POM2 was not working and there were not just nervous symptoms but
other symptoms too

*In post mortem, multiple organ failure was noticed. The peritoneal cavity is 
found to be filled with blood tinged fluid.

*In large mammals and ruminants, vomiting is abnormal – however, one of the 
fatally affected animals brought to the AHC vomited.

*For
the dysentery cases brought for treatment, normal anti-diarrhoeal drugs
are not working; they have failed to control the problem.

*From the case histories collected, farmers are reporting grazing on Bt Cotton 
as the reason

*There is rumen impaction and digestive process is completely disrupted.

He informed that farmers are reporting that goats are not ready to graze on Bt 
Cotton fields, which is unusual.

In
addition to the complexity of symptoms being reported, according to Dr
Shravan Kumar, the difference with any such cases from earlier years is
that animals are not responding to treatment.

Dr Sanjeeva Reddy
posted in Talamadugu village who also conducted a few post mortems
reported the following in a telephonic conversation:

Symptoms
include bloat, bloody diarrhea with convulsions and respiratory
symptoms. Animals go off-feed and also exhibit anorexia for a week
after treatment, he informed

*A case in Talamadugu was so acute that it could not be treated

*From around the 27th of February, he has been treated 15 cases per day on an 
average with these symptoms

*He has been sending material to VBRI for further testing and confirmation

He
reported that it is not unusual for animals to have digestive problems
due to grazing on cotton but this year, the cases are severe and are
high in numbers. In earlier years, animals that were exposed were high
and affected were low or almost negligible. However, it was not so this
year. He also speculated that this could be because of excessive
feeding also.

Mr Laxmi Narayan Goud, government Livestock
Assistant posted in Devapur village reported that at least 15 cases
have been brought to him for treatment from Devapur village in February
2007 showing the above symptoms – mostly bloat and salivation. He also
felt that the effect on sheep was apparent too, with pneumonia and
dysentery reported.

Dr M Venkata Swamy, the Joint Director-Animal Husbandry for Adilabad district 
reported the following:

*this type of mortality was not present with normal cotton grazing

*it
is with Bt Cotton that such problems are arising, as per discussions
with farmers as well as with employees of the department

*there is a "toxic effect", reasons of which are yet to be confirmed

*the toxic effect includes shivering, salivation, bloat, dysentery and 
fatalities too

*there is haemorrhage apparent with all organs being congested.

The
Joint Director – Agriculture, Mr Sayanna, speculated that the toxicity
could be because of pesticide residues on cotton crop even as he said
that sprayings have been very, very low this year due to negligible
pest incidence. He also wondered whether this could be because of
toxicity in other crops that the animals would have grazed on. He
reported that the agriculture department is not doing any
investigations of its own on this subject though they are in touch with
the animal husbandry department and the commissionerate of agriculture
in Hyderabad. He reported that as a precautionary measure, the
agriculture department is advising farmers to remove the crop residues
in Bt Cotton fields and not to leave them for grazing.

While
everyone waits for the findings from the laboratory analysis that VBRI
is supposed to be undertaking of animal samples and plant samples to
understand the phenomenon of livestock illnesses and death after
grazing on Bt Cotton fields, CSA demands the following:

*that GEAC stop approving any more Bt Cotton hybrids for field trials and 
commercial cultivation;
*that it get involved in the investigations and ensure complete scientificity 
and transparency to the studies.

*that
the state and central governments compensate the farmers whose
livelihoods have been adversely affected due to the death of their
livestock – whether it is pesticide residues or toxicity from Bt
Cotton, it is apparent that the government is responsible for
inadequate biosafety testing in the first instance.

*that the
companies stop trying to influence the officials who are responding to
the situation and investigating further (a team of officials/scientists
from some of the companies involved have been holding meetings with the
veterinary department officials and making presentations to say that
the Bt toxin cannot be responsible for the toxicity phenomenon).

Kavitha Kuruganti
--
Kavitha Kuruganti
Centre for Sustainable Agriculture
12-13-445, Street # 1, Tarnaka
Secunderabad 500 017

Phone: +91-9393001550

Population             reduction, a globalist goal, allows monopoly ownership 
of the earth’s             resources – less population means more for them! 
War, famine, suppressed             cures for catastrophic diseases, abortion 
acceptance, and health-destroying,             cancer-producing Monsanto 
monopolized genetically modified foods all             reduce world population 
and produce big profits. - Deanna Spingola, Political Researcher.



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