Reject Claims against GMOs by Anti-GMO Groups -fmr. CSIR Boss warns farmers
by Joseph Kobla Wemakor (aglahsoliner@yahoo.com)
The Former Director General of the Council for Scientific
and Industrial Research Ghana (CSIR) Prof. Walter Sandow Alhassan has
urged farmers to reject claims against Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) seeds
by Anti-GMO groups that it is harmful and accepting it would amounts to “seed
colonisation and seed slavery".
Prof. Walter S. Alhassan |
According to him, those groups do not have any
scientific proof or knowledge to offer when it comes to Genetically Modified
Organisms (GMOs) technology therefore should be abhorred.
GMOs have generated huge controversy in Ghana
since 2013 after the Ghanaian government announced its introduction into the
country that same year.Several activists groups including Food Sovereignty Ghana, the Coalition for Farmers Rights and other individuals have kicked against it describing it as harmful and a threat to human life.
Other Anti-GMO groups till date have rejected the idea, encouraging Ghanaians to stand up against its introduction into the country’s food chain, claiming that accepting it will amount to “seed colonisation and seed slavery which OFAB Ghana Chapter has dismissed vehemently.
.But addressing a group of farmers at a sensitization workshop
on the topic “GMOs the truth and misconceptions” at the Bronkyempem Hall, Techiman in
the Brong Ahafo Region, Prof. Walter Sandow Alhassan advice farmers to avoid being misled
by the so-called Anti-GMO groups.
''We should get away from this misinformation and try to
see how we can revolutionize our Agriculture and move with modern trends"
he emphasised.
He told them to be in close touch with institutions who
know about the advance technologies in Agriculture, referring to
the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), the Ministry of
Food and Agriculture (MOFA) and the Universities as institutions grounded in
advance knowledge in GM technology.
''My advice to you is that you should get proper explanation on the modern
technology and be able to determine whether or not that particular technology you
are growing is good for you. Feel free to talk to the CSIR, and then MOFA and if you are not
successful in getting answers, go ahead and
cross check with the CSIR again and then move on to the Universities, “they
have the knowledge and will be able to assist
you." he suggested .
The former CSIR boss who is also a consultant by profession equally urged
Government to be steadfast in supporting Ghanaian scientists towards their research work by creating an enabling
environment or framework for them ; equipping them with more research
facilities, infrastructures and training to augment research work into the
field of Biotechnology.
The workshop was organized by the
Ghana Chapter of the Open Forum on Agricultural Biotechnology in Africa (OFAB)
in collaboration with the African Agricultural Technology Foundation (AATF) and
the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), Ghana.
In
attendance were farmers, scientists, journalists, agriculture extension
officers’ officials from the Ministry of Food and Agriculture, traditional
rulers, policy makers, the OFAB staff members and other stakeholders in the
Agricultural Industry.
OFAB - Ghana is a platform
that brings together all stakeholders in Biotechnology to interact and discuss
biotechnology in order to bring awareness of the technology and provide correct
information to all stakeholders.
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