Oversight of GM crop samples to be boosted
Updated: 2014-05-06 07:11
(China Daily)
|
|||||||||
Genetically modified food research groups in China will strengthen supervision of GM samples following an alleged case of theft at a research base in Hainan province on April 11.
A notice from the Ministry of Agriculture last month said stealing the country's GM technology and seed samples could cause irreparable damage to the nation. Research organizations must pay close attention to this threat, it added.
Besides stressing further regulation of GM experiments, the notice requires GM research bases to enhance management and supervision of people and vehicles accessing their premises.
Huang Dafang, a former member of the nation's biosafety committee in charge of agricultural GM organisms, confirmed the notice's appearance to China Daily.
It was issued after two campaigners from international non-governmental environmental organization Greenpeace were caught allegedly collecting three packets of seeds and leaves at a research base at Huazhong Agricultural University in Hainan province last month.
Huang said the notice criticized Greenpeace for alleged theft.
A statement from the university said the impact of such behavior was still being assessed and it reserved the right to take any legal action. Any theft of GM samples could trigger the illegal expansion of GM materials and even disclose these to foreign countries, the statement said.
Greenpeace denied the accusation.
Wang Jing, a senior Greenpeace food and agricultural campaigner who was involved in the "field investigation" on April 11, said the samples were collected outside the experimental field to see if surrounding fields were affected.
She said Greenpeace decided to investigate the safety management of GM food in Hainan following media reports that GM corn and cotton crops were suspected to have been planted illegally in the province.
Wang said that only through the "undercover field investigation" could they be objective and obtain samples firsthand.
"During our investigation, we found that the research base had problems with its distance from surrounding farmland, falling short of the national standard of 100 meters," Wang said.
According to a ministry regulation on safety assessment and management of GM organisms, the isolation distance for GM wheat should be more than 100 meters.
But the university said the GM experimental fields meet national standards and there is even a 2.7-meter-high wall built to protect nearby farmland.
wangqian@chinadaily.com.cn
|
China rejects US GM corn shipment |
- Illegal GM food raises concerns
- Illegal GM crops destroyed in Hainan in 2013
- GM cow a step closer to commercial pastures
- China rejects US GM corn shipments
- GM food safety tests, logos are planned
- GM rice strains to expire before planting, officials say
- China rejects 601,000 tonnes of GM corn in 2013
- American wrestlers win Times Square event
- Chinese enrollment for US MBAs is rising
- Confucius Institute marks 5th year at George Mason
- Chinese artists attend NY philanthropists' event
- Chinese in 'orbit' over lollipops
- Red panda gets a name, at last
- Forum trends: Made in China - cheap and inferior?
- Chinese artists are part of NY philanthropists' event
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Coming to a small screen near you |
China catches running bug in quest for better health |
Xi spreads the word on fighting terror |
Variety is the spice of academic life |
Xinjiang hopes to prove that the west is best |
Documents prove the truth can't be buried |
Today's Top News
Top US school's offer puts youth into spotlight
Facebook gains by aiding nation's exporters: VP
China's mobile gaming market to top US and be No 1
Cheetah Mobile IPO on NYSE raises $168m
Cipher this: Chinese novel explores cryptography's labyrinth
Confucius Institute marks its fifth year at George Mason Univ
Thailand's new PM seen capable of compromises
China urges Japan to maintain regional peace
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |