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Ghanaians are being misled about the plant breeders' bill!

Fri, 24 Jan 2014 Source: Jehu-Appiah, Ali-Masmadi

Feature Article by Food Sovereignty Ghana

The Plant Breeders' Bill currently at the Consideration Stage before our

Parliament is all about the imposition of genetically modified organisms

into our food chain without any form of public awareness and

participation in that decision. Far from simply dealing with the rights

of the plant breeder, the Bill is designed in such a way as to pre-empt

the eventualities of government regulations such as those calling for

the labelling of GM foods, or the banning some of them for the sake of

the environment or the health of Ghanaians.

This is what Clause 23 of the Plant Breeders' Bill is about:

_CLAUSE_ _23: MEASURES REGULATING COMMERCE. _

"_A plant breeder right shall be independent of any measure taken by the

Republic to regulate within Ghana the production, certification and

marketing of material of a variety or the importation or exportation of

the material."_

The Bill seeks to pre-emptively knock out of order, any attempt by the

government to control "_the production, certification and marketing of

material of a variety or the importation or exportation of the

material."_ And the "material of a variety" in question is described in

Clause 20 (6) of the Bill as follows:

_CLAUSE 20 [1] (6):_

"(6) An essentially derived variety may be obtained for example by the

selection of a

(a) natural mutant or induced mutant,

(b) somaclonal variant, or

_(c) variant individual from a plant of the initial variety, back

crossing __OR TRANSFORMATION BY GENETIC ENGINEERING__."_

For more on the specifics of the bill see:_ Plant Breeders' Bill

Protects GMOs | Food Sovereignty Ghana

http://foodsovereigntyghana.org/plant-breeders-bill-protects-gmos/ [2]_

Food Sovereignty Ghana is horrified by the mind-boggling attempts by

people in responsible positions of public trust who are supposed to know

better, to mislead the Ghanaian public and our law-makers that the Plant

Breeders' Bill has nothing to do with GMOs! The Bill has GMOs in the

crossed hairs. The objective is to disable the ability of Ghanaians to

legally challenge anything relating to the GMO imposition.

The Attorney-General and Minister for Justice, Mrs. Marietta Brew

Appiah-Oppong, who ought to know better than this, has been a source of

this misleading propaganda to divorce the Plant Breeders' Bill from

GMOs. She is on record to have challenged the FSG linkage of the PBB

with GMOs at our meeting with the Parliamentary sub-committee on

Constitutional, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs.

It is obvious that there is an orchestrated attempt not only to mislead

Parliament into voting for the Bill, but also to throw dust into the

eyes of the Ghanaian public about the real intent and import of the Bill

vis-à-vis the enabling of the plant breeder to introduce GMOs into our

food chain without any public awareness and participation in that

decision.

As the debate regarding the linkage between the PBB and GMOs raged on,

the Ministry of Food and Agriculture (MOFA) through Deputy Minister at

MOFA in-charge of Crops, Dr Yakubu Alhassan, joined the fray to publicly

deny pushing a legalisation in support of the introduction of

genetically modified organisms (GMOs) in the country.

"It has, therefore, described as untrue, recent discussions by some

institutions, civil society organisations (CSOs) and individuals that

the Plant Breeders Bill, currently before Parliament, was meant to give

legal backing to the production and consumption of GMOs in the country".

See: NO [3]PLANS TO INTRODUCE GMOS INTO GHANA - AGRIC MINISTRY [3]

Also, on December, 19, 2013, the Director-General of the Council for

Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), Dr Abdulai Baba Salifu, was

reported by the Ghana News Agency to have even organised a press

conference to claim that "The Plant Breeder's Right Bill before

parliament, is to protect crop variety breeders and has nothing to do

with Genetically Modified (GM) foods as been speculated." See: BREEDERS'

BILL HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH GMOS – CSIR [4]

http://www.ghananewsagency.org/science/breeders-bill-has-nothing-to-do-with-gmos-csir--68771

[4]

It would have been bad enough as it is, even if it could be argued that

these people in responsible positions such as the Attorney-General,

Director-General of CSIR, and the Deputy Minister for Food and

Agriculture in charge of crops, made these these wild claims simply

because they have not even bothered to read the Bill for themselves

before pronouncing on an issue they have no idea of.

What is even alarming is the fact that these people continued to peddle

their lies even after being publicly corrected by Prof. Walter Sando

Alhassan during the FSG meeting with the Parliamentary sub-committee on

Constitutional, Legal, and Parliamentary Affairs on December 4, 2014.

They continued to stubbornly peddle these lies even after this! There

seems to be a discernible determination on their part to use plain lies

and deceit to push the Plant Breeders' Bill into law.

Considering the far-reaching implications of this Bill on our

sovereignty as a people, our health, as well as the sanity of our

environment, the behaviour of these public officials goes beyond gross

dereliction of duty to a betrayal of public trust and criminal

negligence. It is a sad commentary on the entire Mahama Administration

that these officials are still in post, and not under investigation for

possible conflicts of interest. Monsanto is notorious for bribing their

way in several countries. And such blatant lies from people in

responsible positions must give cause for concern.

The very fact that the Plant Breeders' Bill has gone through First and

Second Reading without expunging the obnoxious clauses from it speaks

volumes of the vulnerability of our branches of government to undue

external influences inimical to Ghana. The Bill is being rushed to

comply with the World Trade Organisation's WTO, Trade and Related

Intellectual Property Rights, TRIPS-rules without proper scrutiny. Ghana

does not have to make the plant breeder's right over and above the laws

of Ghana in order to be in compliance.

The level and quality of the debates on the floor of Parliament over the

Bill betrays a lack of information critical in taking these far-reaching

decisions. For instance, most Parliamentarians are even unaware that the

Bill before them is asking them to evacuate their sacred responsibility

to diligently protect the health and safety of Ghanaians. Fewer still

even know that the Bill has anything to do with GMOs. And those who did

know and tried to speak up, were told publicly, and without any

challenge, as trying "to confuse issues of botany with intellectual

property"! See: page 483 of the Hansard, Plant Breeders' Bill, 2013,

Second Reading, 8th November, 2013.

It is under an atmosphere such as this that we call upon Parliament to

defer debate on the Bill and begin to initiate a process of public

consultations regarding the introduction of GMOs into our food chain.

FSG feels very relieved that several civil society groups, workers'

unions, religious bodies, as well as political figures and heads of

stake-holder public institutions have come out openly calling for a

careful look, further public awareness and consultations, before

proceeding. We particularly welcome the counsel by the Catholic Bishops

Conference to the Parliament to "make haste slowly" with the Plant

Breeders' Bill. Meanwhile, our goods are getting rotten in the farms,

our farmers have no security of tenure, our roads are poor and there are

a thousand of things the government can do to ensure food security.

There is no reason to rush with the Plant Breeders' Bill.

For Life, the Environment, and Social Justice!

Ali-Masmadi Jehu-Appiah,

Chairperson, FSG

Columnist: Jehu-Appiah, Ali-Masmadi