French
scientists have revealed that rats fed on GMO corn sold by American firm
Monsanto, suffered tumors and other complications including kidney and liver
damage. When testing the firm’s top brand weed killer the rats showed similar
symptoms.
The
French government has asked its health and safety agency to assess the study
and had also sent it to the European Union's food safety agency, Reuters
reports.
"Based
on the conclusion…, the government will ask the European authorities to take
all necessary measures to protect human and animal health, measures that could
go as far as an emergency suspension of imports of NK603 maize in the European
Union," the French health, environment and farm ministries said in a
joint statement.
Researchers
from the University of Caen found that rats fed on a diet containing
NK603 – a seed variety made tolerant to amounts of Monsanto's Roundup
weedkiller – or given water mixed with the product, at levels permitted in
the United States – died earlier than those on a standard diet.
The
research conducted by Gilles-Eric Seralini and his colleagues, said the rats
suffered mammary tumors, as well as severe liver and kidney damage. The study
was published in the journal of Food and Chemical Toxicology and presented at a
news conference in London.
Fifty
percent of male and 70 percent of female rats died prematurely, compared with
only 30 percent and 20 percent in the control group, said the researchers.
Monsanto
spokesman, Thomas Helscher, said the company would review the study thoroughly
but stated that other scientific studies had proved the biotech crops’ safety.
Some
scientists however criticized the French researchers’ statistical methods and
the use of a particular type of rat, saying the albino Sprague-Dawley strain of
animal had a tendency to develop cancers.
But
despite skepticism, the study draws attention to controversy surrounding
genetically modified crops and the US biotech giant Monsanto.
Michael
Antoniou, a molecular biologist at King’s College London – who acted as an
adviser to Seralini's team – told reporters that the study stresses the “need
to test all GMO crops in two-year lifelong studies”.
“I
feel this data is strong enough to withdraw the marketing approval for this
variety of GMO maize temporarily, until this study is followed up and repeated
with larger number of animals to get the full statistical power that we want,” he said as quoted
by Reuters.
Last
Friday France said it will uphold a ban on genetically modified crops produced by the
Monsanto. The move came as President Francois Hollande pushed his plan to put
the environment back at the top of the international agenda.
In
the wake of the publication, Jose Bove, vice-chairman of the European
Parliament’s commission for agriculture, called for an immediate suspension of
all EU cultivation and import authorizations of genetically modified crops.
“This
study finally shows we are right and that it is urgent to quickly review all
GMO evaluation processes,” he said following the announcement of the
research.
While being widely used in the United States, GMO crops
have been
less popular among
European consumers, due to concerns about its impact on people’s
health and the environment.
In California, opponents of genetically engineered food are
fighting to have it removed from the food supply. They are also pushing to pass Proposition
37,
a law that would legally require genetically modified foods to be labeled as
such. Monsanto stands opposed to such a proposal and has donated over $4.2
million to lobby against it.
Agriculturalists
across America have previously tried to take the biotech giant to court over
charges stemming from their lab-made corn GMOs. Over 2,000 farmers have
petitioned the US government to more thoroughly investigate the impact that
genetically modified corn crop from Monsanto will have on the country.
As
RT reported before, Monsanto wants to plant a corn variant across America’s
Midwest that will be resistant to a powerful pesticide produced with 2,4-D, the
same compound crucial to the make-up of the notorious Vietnam War-era killer
Agent Orange. If approved, the new corn will be able to thrive as farmers douse
their fields in the chemical, killing off unwanted weeds in the process, while
at the same time subjecting Americans to a pesticide linked to cancer risks.
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