| Vatican GM seminar under fire |
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Vatican GM seminar under fire A
Vatican organised international seminar on genetically modified foods
has run into controversy, after being criticised by African priests
for failing to include Church members opposed to the crops. The
seminar of 67 scientists and Catholic Church representatives which finished
today (Tuesday) was called to enable the Vatican to assess whether genetically
modified organisms (GMO's) should receive the backing of the Church.
They
said Church leaders in the Philippines, Brazil and South Africa, had
all expressed "deep concerns based on practical experiences"
which were not being reflected at the seminar. The
two priests said the current design of commercially promoted GMOs was
based on an industrial model of agriculture that favours large farms
at the expense of family farms. They
added the assertion that GMO crops would lessen the problem of world
hunger through increased productivity "is open to direct challenge".
They
said adoption of GMO's would "introduce a serious dependency of
small scale and mostly poor farmers on large multinational corporations
for seeds and complementary necessities". The Vatican denied the seminar was intentionally biased in favour of GMOs and insisted both sides of the issue will be considered when the Vatican finally made a decision on GMOs.
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