
Porto Alegre
The civil society organizations meeting on August 20, 1999 in the city of Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul state, with the objective of discussing transgenic products: Considering the hundreds of examples of scientific and experimental evidence from various parts of the world, demonstrating that transgenics are a threat and risk to human health and to food security, apart from being transgressors of the harmonious processes of nature; and considering that the level of uncertainty is so high, - a fact recognized by the scientists working on this technology - that even further unforeseen risks may exist; Considering that the production and the business resulting from research on transgenics in agriculture are in the hands of an ever smaller group of transnational corporations that merge and end up controlling fundamental areas for the survival of humanity and other species, such as through the seeds, the processing and distribution of foodstuffs, the petrochemical industry and biochemistry; Considering that a fundamental right of citizens as consumers and/or producers to exercise their free choice in consumption and production is being violated since, among other things, the consumer is denied his basic right to information regarding the contents of his food, and farmers are denied the right to save their own seeds for the next season as a result of the introduction of the Terminator gene; Considering that the economic power of these corporations interferes with political power, e.g. by determining exclusive laws such as patent laws, which eliminate options and impact biodiversity; Considering that manipulating and crossing vegetable and animal species which would never cross in the billions of years of the existence of this planet is an act of the greatest violence and arrogance, and against ethical behavior; Facing this huge concentration of power, we demand that: The federal, state, and municipal governments, based on the precautionary principle, immediately suspend all and whatever action which legalizes the production and commercialization of transgenic foods, whether national or imported; That resources be allocated and actions undertaken to clarify the risks to the public of this new technological matrix; That public research be promoted, within principles of ethics, and social, economic and environmental sustainability, oriented toward solving the problems of the majority, rather than to generate greater concentration and dependence; Civil society in Rio Grande do Sul, through its movements and social, environmental, consumer, men and women farmers' organizations, labor unions, landless rural workers' organizations, cooperatives, and others, affirm their decision to work for a world free of transgenics, beginning in Rio Grande do Sul. We call the organizations and movements from all states of Brazil to undertake similar mobilizations, in this way joining our voices and arms with the current from innumerable parts of the planet -- whether in Asia, Africa, Europe, or in our brother countries in Latin America, in the fight for a world free of transgenics.
Approved by the plenary and by the following groups:
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Last Updated on 9/2/99 By Karen Lutz Email: karen@biotech-info.net |
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