News

December 16, 2024

HOMEF collaborates with civil society group against GMO food in Nigeria

By Ozioruva Aliu

BENIN CITY – THE Nigerian government has been called upon to ban Genetically Modified Organism (GMO) foods, and support and promote Agroecology, saying it is the viable alternative for food sovereignty and climate resilience in the country.

Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF) made the call during an awareness campaign held in Benin City yesterday in collaboration with the Edo Civil Society Organisations (EDOCSO).

The GMO-free Nigeria awareness campaign which was held across 10 states of the federation, took the campaigners in Benin City to the state House of Assembly, Government House, and the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security where they submitted their petitions.

The campaigners in their large numbers carried placards with inscriptions as: ‘Food should not be grown in a Lab;’ ‘support small scale farmers;’ ‘GMOs have to go #BanGMOs;’ ‘What we eat must not eat us;’ ‘I will not be genetically modified;’ ‘We Nigerians reject GMOs;’ ‘GMO-free Nigeria’, among others.

The Executive Director of HOMEF, Dr. Nnimmo Bassey through a speech said Nigeria does not need GMOs to address food insecurity stressing that the design of those crops does not support local economic growth but promotes dependency on corporate seed supply.

Bassey explained further: “In September 2024, the National Cotton Association of Nigeria (NACOTAN) were reported to have said that they did not record any significant increase in their yields compared to the local seed varieties but instead, since the introduction of GM cotton seeds over 4 years ago, yield per hectare has remained about the same.

“Also, the farmers noted that no other plant has been able to germinate on the farmlands where the GM seeds were planted, even after four years – confirming the concerns regarding loss of biodiversity and soil degradation due to release of genetic material (proteins) into the soil which would not ordinarily occur.”

Bassey further decried the fact that farmers are not able to replant the GM seeds after harvest due to declining yields.

Also lending his voice through a statement, Barr. Ifeanyi Nwankwere, National Co-coordinator of GMO-Free Nigeria Alliance, noted that GMOs approved in Nigeria, so far are not currently being labelled, adding that Nigeria’s socio-economic context would not allow labelling to be effective considering how food is sold in cups and basins in open markets where majority of Nigerians shop from.

Nwankwere noted that the biosafety regulatory system in Nigeria is not designed in a way that assures safety with regard to GMOs and that the National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA) Act has fundamental flaws that must be looked into.

Speaking at the Government House during the rally, Coordinator – General of EDOCSO, Leftist Omobude Agho, while expressing worry that 14 seeds have been approved for GMO by the agency saddled with the responsibility of regulating food in the country, urged Edo state government to forward an Executive Bill to the state house of assembly that would criminalise GMO foods in the state.

According to him, GMOs were introduced by the Western world in order to cause sickness in people’s bodies so that they can sell their pharmaceutical products.

“The secret of it all is that they want to colonise our food. Our lives will be dependent on their laboratory to eat food. We must decide to leave our lives and not the Western world determining it for us. Our lives are our rights, we must reject GMOs,” he added.