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Angola Rejection Of GM Food Threatens
To Disrupt Food Aid 

AP 29mar04

JOHANNESBURG—A surprise decision by Angola to reject genetically modified food aid threatens to disrupt distributions to 1.9 vulnerable people - many of them newly returned after the country's two-decade civil war - the U.N. food agency said Monday.

The decision, announced by Angola's Council of Ministers on March 17, comes at a time when the World Food Program is already battling funding shortfalls for its program in the oil-rich southern African country.

Mindfully.org note:
The US refuses to ship GM-free food, which is in essence, forcing people to eat what they know to be fowl and possibly dangerous. At a minimum, if a country accepts GM food, then it will not be able to sell its own crops to countries that refuse to allow it into the country. An excellent example is Mexico's acceptance of US corn through USAID. Mexico's corn is now polluted with Monsanto's GM genes because that was what USAID shipped to them. This food aid made its way throughout rural Mexico, all the way to far reaches of Oaxaca. All this in spite of the law forbidding farmers to grow GM crops.

More on Oaxaca
. . .

U.N. officials are currently in discussions with Angolan authorities to determine the implications for a 19,000-ton shipment of U.S. maize that had been earmarked for the country. If there is no clarity by Wednesday, the U.S. could redirect the maize to another country, officials said.

Angola, a nation of about 14 million people, was ruined by the war pitting the government against UNITA rebels. Up to a half-million Angolans fled their country before it ended in 2002. The fighting also drove some 4 million people from their homes within the country.

Some 3.8 million have now returned to their rural homes, but about 1.5 million remain dependent on food aid, according to WFP figures.

Despite pressing needs, Angola is struggling to compete for funds with other aid-dependent countries.

Donors have privately questioned the government's commitment to resolving humanitarian problems in a country where one in every four dollars in oil earnings is unaccounted for, according to anti-corruption activists.

So far, WFP has only been able to raise 24% of the $143 million it needs for the year beginning April 1, the agency's regional director, Mike Sackett, said in Johannesburg.

Next month, it will be forced to reduce its cereal rations by 30%, he said. If no new donors are found by June, they will be cut again to 50%.

"The GM question is, I think, a further blow to the achievements of the objectives set out by WFP in Angola," Sackett said.

Details of the ban, which does not apply to milled grain, remain unclear, and the decision has not yet been officially implemented.

But it could have major implications for Angola, which receives up to 77% of its food aid from the U.S. American biotech companies have been at the forefront of promoting genetically modified food, or GMOs, which can be made to resist insects or disease.

Europe, however, has imposed a moratorium on growing or importing GMOs because of fears about the environmental and heath risks.

African countries such as Zambia and Zimbabwe have also rejected biotech food aid.

WFP respects their wishes, Sackett said. But importing milled grain is more expensive, and it can take months to source alternatives, he said.

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