RoundUp is a pesticide that is manufactured by Monsanto. The major ingredient is glyphosate. |
South
African's staple food is maize; most of it is genetically modified and
sprayed with the weedkiller glyphosate. There is an ongoing dispute over
whether or not the pesticide is healthy for people and the planet.
Maize is South
Africa's staple food and some people eat it up to three times a day.
According to the South African Department of Science and Technology, 86
percent of maize and 85 percent of soy in South Africa are genetically
modified and most are sprayed with the weedkiller Roundup which contains
glyphosate.
According to the
International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), a subdivision of the
World Health Organization (WHO), there is strong evidence that
glyphosate can cause cancer. Institutes in countries where glyphosate is
in high use, for example Argentina and Canada, have carried out studies
assessing whether the use of the weedkiller could lead to kidney
diseases, birth defects or childhood cancer.
In the beginning,
glyphosate was only used before seeding to get rid of weeds but
biotechnology opened up new possibilities through the use of genetic
modification. Now plants can be engineered to be resistant to poisons
like glyphosate so that the weedkiller can be sprayed directly on to the
crops.
Many countries,
including Germany, are highly critical of the use of glyphosate. In June
2016, the European Commission reduced its licensing of the product from
15 to 1.5 years following protests from member states. Other
institutions, including the US Environmental Protection Agency and the
European Food Safety Authority, object to the IARC's findings.
Poison or promise?
"Why is South
Africa poisoning its people?" This is how Chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi,
the President and founder of South Africa's Inkatha Freedom Party and
traditional prime minister of the Zulu nation, titled a recent press
release.
"It is disturbing
that the government has abandoned its responsibility for the well-being
of South Africans," the press release read.
Toren Wing is one
of the co-signers of the press release and chairperson of the South
African Traditional Doctor's Union. Even though no official statistics
on cancer have been published since 2011, Toren Wing stated in an
interview with DW that the rate of cancer is rising in South Africa.
"I work with about
500 doctors and the word from the doctors on the ground is that cancer
is exploding in the country," he said. "Cancer used to be one in a
thousand. Then some twenty or thirty years ago the figure was one in
twenty-seven. Now the number is one in three."
Corporations versus farmers
"Our concern is the
lack of any kind of research into the possible effects of glyphosate on
humans," said Haidee Swanby, a researcher at the African Center for
Biodiversity (ACB), in an interview with DW. Her institution campaigns
against the activities of Monsanto, the main producer and provider of
glyphosate in South Africa.
"The issue in
Africa around those chemicals is that people don't wear safety gear,
they often don't understand the language that the instructions come in.
I've seen people mixing with their hands in open drums, I've seen people
storing herbicides in their kitchen and people using empty containers
to go and fetch water from the river," said Swanby.
The managing director of Monsanto in South Africa, Kobus Steenekamp, denies any negative effects on human health.
"We still believe
that it's a safe product to use and we are guided by many internal
studies. Glyphosate is still guaranteed and there is a full review of
safety in the use. We still challenge the classification of the IARC,"
he said. "So many things are put in place like protective clothing, for
instance."
Environmental impact
Glyphosate is the
most-used weedkiller in the world. In 2006 South Africa's farmers
sprayed 2 million liters per year, according to the African Center for
Biodiversity. Now, the amount is more than five times higher.
While there
continues to be a debate on the pesticide's effect on humans, the effect
on the environment is clear. For example, weeds which were meant to be
killed off by the pesticide have become resistant. The emergence of
these so-called superweeds means that new chemicals have to be
introduced into the cycle.
Swanby sees this as
good business for big enterprises like Monsanto: more superweeds, more
pesticides. But she questions the role of her country in this industrial
domination of the agricultural section.
"South Africa has
played a big role in helping to promote the use of GMOs in other
countries. So definitely South Africa is a wonderful place for Monsanto.
We are a very industrialized, agricultural country and we are very
powerful on the rest of the continent. It's a perfect springboard," she
said.
A success story?
Monsanto's
Steenekamp sees a success story in genetically modified crops and
glyphosate in South Africa. According to him, the productivity is higher
on a smaller surface. Whereas in the 1970s two tons of crops were
produced per hectare, Steenkamp claims that today the amount has more
than doubled. He sees his company as the solution to food scarcity and
even as a protector of biodiversity.
"Traditionally when
you spray an insecticide over a maize field, you would have killed all
the non-target or beneficial insects as well," he said. "Now you also
protect all the other biodiversity."
The African Center
for Biodiversity has joined the UK's Pesticide Action Network, Canada's
Biotechnology Action Network and the international Friends of the Earth
organization to oppose the use of glyphosate.
According to them,
glyphosate causes serious decreases in biodiversity by eradicating wild
plants which are an important food source for many insects and birds and
is highly toxic to aquatic life.
Mariam Mayet,
director of the ACB, wrote in a press release that "South Africa is at a
crossroads: either it must abandon Monsanto's GM maize or face an
economic, social and ecological crisis."
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