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The Indian Environment
Minister , Sri Jairam Ramesh deserves congratulations for
the efforts he is making to hear the public’s views on Bt
brinjal. If nothing else, the range of public concerns
relating to Bt brinjal will come to the fore and help form
the Minister’s opinion about GM crops in general. However
the fact of the matter is, that despite his good
intentions, the Minister is not in a position to take any
action in the matter of Bt brinjal. If he were to decide
on the strength of evidence presented to him, that Bt
brinjal were indeed undesirable, he would not have the
power to act to stop its release. The reason is that in
this case, the Minister of Environment and Forests has no
locus standii. The statutory authority to take decisions
on the release of GMOs, rests with the Genetic
Engineering Approval Committee (GEAC) which is India’s
apex decision making body.
In India,
GMOs (Genetically Modified Organisms) are regulated under
the Environment Protection Act 1986 . In addition
the Indian biosafety regulatory framework comprises the
1989 Rules for the Manufacture, Use, Import, Export and
Storage of Hazardous Micro organisms, genetically Modified
Organisms and Cells" , followed by the 1990
"Recombinant
DNA Safety
Guidelines"
(1990 DBT Guidelines) and the 1994 "Revised Guidelines
for Safety in Biotechnology" (1994 DBT Guidelines) and
the 1998 "Revised Guidelines for Research in Transgenic
Plants and Guidelines for Toxicity and Allergenicity
Evaluation of Transgenic Seeds, Plants and Plant Parts"
(1998 DBT Guidelines).
According
to this legal framework, the statutory authority vested
with the power to take decisions on GMOs, is the GEAC.
The Environment Minister
could however make a signal contribution in the matter of
GMOs after being informed by the exercise of public
consultations. He should take steps to improve the
regulatory system on GMOs, plug the loopholes and tighten
the system to make it technically competent and
transparent. This step alone would sort out half the
problems. A stringent, transparent regulatory system would
not allow dubious, poorly tested products to be foisted on
the public. Because of the weak and ambiguous nature of
the Rules of 1989 ( and subsequent amendments) , agencies
wanting the release of their products can avail of
shortcuts and pliant regulators assist in this
indefensible activity.
Gene Campaign had filed a
Public Interest Litigation (PIL) in the Supreme Court in
2004, asking for a National Biotechnology Policy and a
vastly improved regulatory system incorporating among
other things, technical competence, transparency and the
involvement of the public in decision making. The case is
dragging through the Supreme Court in its sixth year with
no signs of any resolution. In the meantime GEAC has
preempted everything and given permission for the
cultivation of Bt brinjal. This has happened despite the
fact that there is neither a labeling system in place, nor
a law on liability in this country. If some harm were to
come from the commercialization of Bt brinjal, either to
farmers ( poor crops) or to consumers who ate the
vegetable, there is no law according to which the Mahyco
seed company could be held responsible and made to pay
compensation . In the absence of a liability law, the
Mahyco company would go scot free even if its product
were to inflict damage. In the absence of a labeling law ,
India’s official position is for mandatory labeling, the
consumers would have no way of telling whether they were
eating Bt brinjal or not. The freedom of choice guaranteed
by the Consumer Protection Act of India has been taken
away by the GEAC with its decision to allow Bt brinjal to
be commercialized before a system of labeling has been put
in place.
The GEAC permission for
the commercialization of Bt brinjal is highly
questionable on these grounds alone.
By getting involved, Mr
Jairam Ramesh has taken the initiative and given himself
the opportunity to do something worthwhile. He could take
the bull by the horns and do a great public service by
forcing an overhaul of the legal framework governing GMOs
in India. It is high time this was done. The regulatory
framework stands on wobbly legal legs. An evaluation done
by the Law Ministry a couple of years ago had suggested
that the system would not stand scrutiny in a court of
law. It is ad hoc and arbitrary and full of opportunities
for misuse. Mr Ramesh could certainly get that sorted out. |