Contact Us

Membership

Internet Links

PATRONS

  • Prof Denise Ackermann
  • Bishop Mvume Dandala
  • Prof Inus Daneel
  • Father Richard Menatsi
  • Rev Dr Molefe Tsele
  • GOVERNING BOARD

  • Vacant (Chairperson)
  • Bishop Geoff Davies (Deputy-Chairperson)
  • Prof Ernst Conradie (Executive Secretary)
  • Rev Andrew Warmback (Treasurer)
  • and regional reporters
  • Genetically Modified Organisms

    Brazilian Catholic Bishops have declared seeds the "common inheritance of humanity". Read here what they have to say about GMO's

    Bishops of the Pastoral Land Commission (of Brazil) express their
    opposition to the use of GMOs
    Concerned about the latest developments in relation to GMOs, the Bishops
    of the National Conference of Bishops of Brazil (CNBB in Portuguese),
    accompanied by the Pastoral Land Commission, wrote a letter on 6 May
    describing the damage to health caused by such products.  They call
    attention also to the loss of food sovereignty implied by the use of GMO
    seeds.  The document was delivered to the President of the House, Joao
    Paulo Cunha, in the ceremony commemorating the tabling of the proposal
    to establish a military base in Alcantara.
    The text of this document follows:
    DECLARATION ON GMOs.
    We, the Bishops accompanying the Pastoral Land Commission (CPT) from the
    diverse regions of the National Conference of Bishops (of Brazil),
    confronted by the grave problem of GMOs in our country and supported by
    current legal dispositions, take the initiative to make a declaration on
    this issue.
    GMOs are the result of genetic manipulation, which permits the
    production, alteration and transference of genes between living beings,
    breaking the natural barrier between non-species crosses, creating,
    altering and transferring genetic material between vegetables, animals,
    bacteria, viruses and human beings.
    All over the world and here in Brazil many investigators and also social
    leaders have formulated, in an opportune way, serious concerns in
    relation to this issue.  These worries revolve around the following
    risks:
    1st.- In relation to human health, the ingestion of genetically modified
    grains and beans can provoke an increase in allergies, antibiotic
    resistance and an increase in the indices of toxic substances in foods.
    2nd.- In the environment there is the risk of genetic erosion,
    irreversibly affecting biodiversity, by means of contamination of the
    natural stores of seeds (germ plasma banks).  Added to this is the
    alarming increase in the use of monocultures and the consequent loss of
    the rich variety and quality of our seeds.
    3rd.- GMOs also threaten the food sovereignty of our country, by means
    of the loss of control of the seeds and living organisms by the
    patenting of these, thereby converted into the exclusive and legal
    property of transnational groups with only commercial interests.
    4th. - The greatest risk, nevertheless, as we understand it, is the
    total dependency resulting from the destruction and finally
    disappearance of the small and even medium scale production and
    commercialization of seeds, which are subsumed under the domain of a
    small group of giant and powerful transnational corporations.
    In relation to these questions, on the other hand, we cannot ignore or
    leave aside the ethical requirements such as beneficence, social
    justice, ecological justice and the precautionary principle.
    In principle, beneficence implies our duty to avoid or resist evil or
    harm done to others.  In the case of the massive introduction of new
    technologies that imply potential risks to health, this principle needs
    to be fully guaranteed by means of clear and trustworthy information.
    The principle of social justice, in cases of massive technological
    innovations of a high social impact, leads us to question who will
    benefit and who will be harmed.  Now, in the concrete case of the GMOs
    it is clear that a small group of large corporations will be the
    greatest beneficiary, with grave damage for the family farmer.
    The principle of ecological justice imposes the duty to preserve the
    environment for present and future generations.  GMOs represent a
    serious ecological risk.
    The precautionary principle requires that before liberating any product
    for human consumption, that strict norms of biosecurity be adopted.
    This is not an issue of impeding science or scientific inquiry, nor of
    provoking paranoid fears in the face of something new.  On the contrary,
    science and inquiry need to have their space defended and oriented for
    the common good.  Technological applications that imply potential risks
    on a large scale, need be decided upon, approved, denied or perfected on
    the basis of democratic decisions and under public control.
    Supporting the heroic struggle of popular organizations from the
    countryside and in echo with the great issues discussed in the World
    Social Forum in Porto Alegre, with thankfulness we defend the
    understanding that seeds be declared the common inheritance of humanity
    and preserved in their genetic integrity by farming communities.
    Along this same line, we freely recommend to Public Powers, the Minister
    of the Public Affairs, the Legislature, the Judicial branch and the
    Executive Brand that, as they make decisions on these grave questions,
    they be oriented by these new vindications, as well as by the ethical
    principles that underlie them.
    Itaici, May 6, 2003
    Bishops Accompanying the Pastoral Land Commissions
    Mons. Tomás Balduino, Presidente
    Mons. Xavier Gilles, Vice-Presidente
    Mons. Orlando Dotti
    Mons. Ladislau Biernaski
    Mons. Pedro Casaldáliga
    Mons. André de Witte
    Mons. José Alberto Moura,
    Mons. Guilherme Werlang
    Mons. Heriberto Hermes
    Mons. José Mario Streher
    Mons. Moacir Grecchi
    Mons. José Agusto da Rocha
    Mons. Maurício Grotto
    Mons. Apparecido José Dias