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Greens Environment
Spokesperson Nandor Tanczos says.
NZ should "pull
our head in" after being isolated on GE
New Zealand is now the only country standing in the way of an international
agreement on labelling of GE organisms traded across borders.
"We have been the object of
international condemnation for some time for being one of the countries to block
agreement. Now, to our shame, we stand alone in wanting to deny developing
countries the protection of a robust international standard," Greens Environment
Spokesperson Nandor Tanczos says.
"We have strong rules at our own borders but are seeking to deny that to the
countries that cannot afford the kinds of testing regimes we have in place. It
is a shameful stance. The Government likes to portray our role as being a good
international citizen, but in this instance we are acting like an international
vandal. We need to pull our head in."
Last May in Montreal, New Zealand and Brazil prevented an international meeting
- the Second Meeting of the Parties to the Cartagena Protocol - from reaching
any decision on labelling of traded living GE organisms.
This week, the third meeting of the Parties to the Cartagena Protocol is being
held in Brazil, and New Zealand has now become isolated after Brazil has changed
its negotiating position.
"All the other countries party to the convention are supporting a more robust
labelling regime. Brazil has come up with a compromise that is now under
discussion but New Zealand is still playing a spoiler role," Mr Tanczos says.
The United States is not a party to the convention and Nandor suggests that this
may explain why New Zealand has taken this stance while refusing to give reasons
for objections to labelling, both at the international forum and in Parliament
this week in response to questions in the House.
New Zealand has been insisting on the wording "may contain GMOs" and refusing to
give any explanation for rejecting the "does contain GMOs" wording. The "may
contain GMOs" wording is largely uninformative just as "may contain traces of
nuts" is uninformative when it occurs on every item of processed food in
supermarkets.
"The wording 'may contain GMOs' puts the onus on importing countries to test the
shipments for GE organisms rather than on the exporting country where the
responsibility should lie," Mr Tanczos says.
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