French activist Bove to go on anti-GMO hunger strike

REUTERS, Dec 10 2007

TOULOUSE (Reuters) — French rad­i­cal farmer Jose Bove, who became a world­wide celebri­ty for his fight against junk food, said on Mon­day he would go on a hunger strike to win a one-year ban on genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied (GMO) crops.

REUTERS, Dec 10 2007

TOULOUSE (Reuters) — French rad­i­cal farmer Jose Bove, who became a world­wide celebri­ty for his fight against junk food, said on Mon­day he would go on a hunger strike to win a one-year ban on genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied (GMO) crops.

Speak­ing at the Mil­lau Court of Jus­tice in south­ern France, where his four-month jail sen­tence for trash­ing a GMO field in 2004 was com­mut­ed to a fine, Bove said he would start his unlim­it­ed strike on Jan­u­ary 3, along with 10 to 15 oth­er activists.

The wal­rus-mus­ta­chioed, pipe-smok­ing Bove, some­times dubbed France’s Robin Hood, spent six weeks in jail in 2003 for smash­ing up a McDon­ald’s restau­rant in protest at tar­iffs imposed by the Unit­ed States in retal­i­a­tion for a Euro­pean Union ban on imports of North Amer­i­can hor­mone-treat­ed beef.

While GMO crops are com­mon in the Unit­ed States, France — Europe’s biggest grain pro­duc­er — along with oth­er Euro­pean nations remain high­ly sus­pi­cious of them.

Sup­port­ers say it could lead to hardy strains to help feed the world’s poor. Oppo­nents, which polls say include a major­i­ty of French peo­ple, fear they could harm humans and wildlife by trig­ger­ing an uncon­trolled spread of mod­i­fied genes.

In an attempt to calm these con­cerns, France last week for­mal­ly sus­pend­ed the com­mer­cial use of GMO seeds until Feb­ru­ary 9 and ordered a biotech safe­ty study.

It also set up a com­mit­tee charged with assess­ing the health and envi­ron­men­tal impli­ca­tions of using the only GMO seeds used in Europe, which are reliant on the MON 810 tech­nol­o­gy devel­oped by U.S. biotech giant Mon­san­to.

‘This decree is ridicu­lous. It is a scare­crow,’ Bove said.

‘Every­one knows that there are no sow­ings dur­ing win­ter. We demand a real pause in GMO use in 2008. It must be a year with­out GMOs and we are stat­ing this hunger strike to show our deter­mi­na­tion,’ he added.

http://www.reuters.com/article/environmentNews/idUSL1011368420071210