NAS |
The Nigerian
Academy of Science (NAS) has declared that genetically-modified foods
are safe for consumption for now.This was against the warning by the
National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA) to the public to be wary of
the products that are on sale in some stores. It said none of the
products had been approved for local consumption.
NAS, during a media
roundtable on GMOs in Nigeria at its office in Lagos, said the country
was ready for the products and that they were safe for both production
and beneficial to the nation based on carefully-documented evidence from
developed countries.
The academy noted
that the technology, though new with expected fears and concerns, would
be useful to the country because of its potential to boost the nation's
agriculture, which would resolve food insecurity.
The outgoing
president of NAS, Prof. Oyewale Tomori, said though the technology seems
fresh, but nothing is new with it, as the academy, in accordance with
its mandate, has examined available evidence from researches in advanced
countries.
According to him,
the academy's stance was informed by existing evidence from the
industrialised countries, which have carefully followed laid-down
principles for such activities, "but in Nigeria, the system has just
been put in place, and we need to prepare for the future."
Tomori, who noted
that there were no forecasts of long-term effect, stressed: "We cannot
predict the future and what is going to happen with these GMOs, but so
far so good, there are no problem from where they have been used; but
that does not mean that it is going to be good forever. We must be on
the alert to know when changes are coming up."
Besides, a
professor of plant breeding and crop biotechnology with the Department
of Genetic and Biotechnology, University of Calabar, Effiom Ene-Obong,
who said there were no scientific evidence that agree with the raised
health concerns of GMOs worldwide, "as they are safe for both production
and consumption."
He noted that
though genetically-modified foods are not commercially produced in
Nigeria yet, three quarters of countries in the world are keyed into
them and as a new technology, fears being entertained are expected, "but
rather the benefits outweigh the worries"
Ene-Obong added:
"Before these products are sent into the market, lots of trials and
investigations are done by so many agencies, such as the Academy of
Sciences Worldwide, United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organisation (UNESCO), World Health Organisation (WHO), to monitor and
make sure they are safe for human consumption and they have
recommended."
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