GMO crops on Cuban TV?

Isbel Diaz Torres

trangenicos puerto rico
Campaign for a Puerto Rico free of GMOs

HAVANA TIMES — A few weeks ago, the multinational TV channel TeleSur put on an evening report about Puerto Rico’s fight against genetically modified organisms (GMOs).

The “GM Puerto Rico” program reported how the giant corporation Monsanto uses parts of this Caribbean country as an experimental lab to test GM seeds and the crops they produce as well as chemical treatments linked to GM technology.

Do us Cuban viewers have the opportunity to get a real insight into what agriculture relying on GM crop production really entails?

It’s true that the subject has been touched upon by our media on several occasions, but up until now it’s barely scraped the surface. The program Pasaje a lo Desconocido by TV reporter Reynaldo Taladrid was unforgettable, where doctors Carlos Borroto and Carlos Delgado made an appearance, both of them defending opposite sides of the argument about whether we would benefit or not from this technology.

Cuba has been importing and producing GM crops for some years now and the Cuban people haven’t been informed thoroughly or systematically about this issue. Therefore, you can perfectly watch a national TV report about the miserable situation in Puerto Rico, without my fellow countrymen feeling like it also applies to them.

The risk perception we have here is zero, while some scientific institutions across the pond are playing at their “experiments” and looking for non-bioethical ways to make profits, at the expense of our agro ecosystem and the human population’s health.

We don’t know anything about the struggle independent social and rural movements in Latin America are waging against multinationals focused on agribusiness, the exact same ones who now threaten to enter our island and demand “in solidarity” for the US embargo to end.

A large part of the scientific community claim, in an uncritical and misinformed way, that GM crops are one of the solutions we have to tackle hunger in poor countries, when investigations underway in the US itself have proven that this technology fails to perform, in that it doesn’t beat non-GMO farming practices by any significant margin.

Cuban bureaucrats claim that the Cuban plan is completely different to that of multinationals like Monsanto. However, the only differences that have come to light are the Cuban institutions’ inefficiency, lack of control and transparency.

In over 30 years of trials and 20 years on the market, GM technologies have failed to significantly increase crop yields in the US. Will it be able to do so in Cuba, where we’re lacking in infrastructure, our lands are devastated, with an agriculture minister who doesn’t know what to “invent” anymore?

However, the most worrying thing is the political blindness that Cuban engineers and ideologues are subject to, who still don’t understand that the problem has nothing to do with productivity or yield sizes, but of the innate predatory, dehumanizing, anti-environmental, non-inclusive, vertical and anti-cultural nature of this system that governs food production (including biotechnologies) in Cuba and in the rest of the world.

And there are still people who promote an uncritical “normalization” or “updating” of the Cuban system.

7 thoughts on “GMO crops on Cuban TV?

  • http://www.watershedsentinel.ca/content/gmos-and-roundup-chemical-glyphosate.
    Gmo’s or “frankenfoods” are associated with cancer, kidney disease and increase in asthma in children. Please get informed before posting corporate MSM dis- and misinformation.
    The case against RoundUp and GMO’s are overwhelming and lead to global disaster re food supplies and diversity. Monsanto, Syngenta and DuPont have a cheque in the mail for you, Bob, and your sidekick, MacDuff….

  • We Bob have a mango tree overhanging our roof. From the end of April onwards there is the odd bump in the night as a mango falls of the tree and in the morning we go up onto the roof – which like most in Cuba is flat and gather them for breakfast. Cuba has some 26 varieties of mango and the very thought of them makes me salivate, for unlike those sold in stores in the rest of the world, they drip that sugary juice. The best of them all in my experience is a variety grown around Santiago. Ours are the smaller yellow ones.
    The other fruit from Cuba which are best in the world in my opinion are the avocado. Up to 9″ in length and weighing one and a half lbs. Superb!
    These are both crops which could be grown on a commercial scale and exported.

  • Entertainingly, the GAESA subsidiary companies stores usually in our town have one and very occasionally two different cooking oils – usually soya, but sometimes – wait for it – canola. Guess how the canola is grown and from what kind of seeds? The soya sells at CUC 2.30 and the canola at CUC 2.40

  • Yep, while Isbel has come up with some thoughts to ponder in the past, one wonders how he believes GMO crops do not increase yield.

    We has “organic” mangoes in my grocery store here in Florida for $2- each. I took a photo and sent it to my significant other in Cueto. Having a good sense of humor she replied that we were rich. All I had to do was figure a way to get mangoes from our trees down there to the stores in Florida.

  • The use of genetically modified canola resistant to Roundup, certainly increased yields and production in Canada Bob. US farmers must be very foolish if they are paying good money to achieve a negative return.

  • I believe there is a great deal of evidence to refute the statement “in over 30 years of trials and 20 years on the market, GM technologies
    have failed to significantly increase crop yields in the US.”

    There is one reason farmers pay Monsanto and other companies top dollar for seeds that can be used for only one season.

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