France has asked the European regulators to suspend the authorization to
plant Monsanto's genetically modified (GM) MON810 corn. France's
ecology minister says the decision is based on studies showing GM crops
"pose significant risks for the environment."
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(SIPA/Durand Florence) |
Agence France-Presse reports:
The request is "based on the latest scientific studies" which show
that the use of the GM crops "pose significant risks for the
environment," the ministry said in a statement.
The ministry pointed to a recent study by the European Food Safety
Authority (EFSA) that raised concerns with another form of GM crop,
BT11, that it said could also be applied to MON 810.
"If the European Union does not act, we can invoke the safeguard
clause" which allows EU nations to independently restrict or prohibit
the sales of products, it said.
President Nicolas Sarkozy in November pledged to seek new legal
measures after the European Court of Justice and France's top
administrative court overturned a French ban on GM crops from US
agriculture giant Monsanto.
France tv info writes
that six countries in the EU also ban the cultivation of genetically
modified corn: Germany, Hungary, Greece, Luxembourg, Austria et
Bulgaria.
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Last week a French court found Monsanto legally responsible for the 2004 poisoning of a farmer with one of its herbicides.
Source: Common Dreams