PARIS (AFP)--France's food watchdog said Thursday it had
concluded that genetically modified corn from U.S. biotech giant
Monsanto Co. (MON) is safe, contradicting an earlier report that
led to a ban on the corn.
The AFSSA report, which became public after it was revealed in
the French daily Le Figaro, angered environmentalists and
embarrassed President Nicolas Sarkozy's government which had
resorted to a special European Union measure to outlaw the
crops.
The agency said there was no evidence to support the view that
MON810, the only strain of GM corn under cultivation in France
before the ban, posed a health risk.
Sarkozy's government slapped a ban on GM crops in February last
year after a panel of experts said in a separate report that they
had "serious doubts" about the Monsanto product.
France invoked an E.U. safeguard giving member states authority
to ban a GM crop provided it has scientific evidence to back this
decision.
The new report was seen as an embarrassment for Ecology Minister
Jean-Louis Borloo, who is to defend France's decision to opt for
the safeguard in meetings in Brussels next week.
The ecology ministry said in a statement that it would not seek
to reverse its decision to opt for the E.U. safeguard.
Environmentalists denounced the report as the product of a plot by
powerful interests in agribusiness.
"This is a major coup by the industrialists," said
activist-farmer Jose Bove, who has waged a decade-long crusade
against GM foods. "This is an attempt to reverse a trend in
Europe."
Bove said the controversy highlighted the need for an
independent authority to put an end once and for all to the debate
over GM foods.
Austria, Germany, Hungary and Greece have also restricted GM
crops.
In 2007, 22,000 hectares were sown with MON810 - less than 1% of
the sown acreage for corn in France.
The earlier expert report said evidence had emerged that MON810
had an effect on insects, a species of earthworm and
microorganisms.
There was also concern that windborne pollen from MON810 could
travel much further than previously thought, perhaps as much as
hundreds of kilometers.
But the report remained controversial: 12 of the 15 scientists
who compiled it issued a statement complaining that their findings
had been misrepresented.