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IE Highlights
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Bring on brinjal
The Indian Express :
This of course means that as long as GEAC’s clearance system is deemed credible, anti-GM agitation should no longer hold up policy. It also means that the government should be smart and anticipate some other activist arguments, the most prominent being the issue of labelling. India’s largely informal vegetable marketing system, it is argued, cannot handle the issue of labelling GM crops. This is a defeatist argument of course, and variations of that can be used to block any change. The government’s answer should be to coordinate its GM policy with the setting up of the new food standards authority. There was some bureaucratic squabble about which ministry will boss the new authority. The health ministry has won the round. As long as Shah Rukh Khan is not seen consuming GM brinjal on screen, hopefully Anbumani Ramadoss will view the issue dispassionately. The new standards authority should work towards a labelling system for all GM crops.
That would be necessary even without activist protest because the potential for GM farming in India is huge. It is among the most exciting solutions to increasing farm output. Bt cotton, to remind everyone, has already shown what can be achieved.
editor@expressindia.com
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