Mischief makers claiming country had been flooded with ‘poisonous’ rice -Ebegba |
The National Biosafety
Management Agency on Wednesday described as untrue claims that there were
genetically modified rice in the Nigerian market.
Media
report continues:
It
said those making the insinuations that the country had been flooded with
‘poisonous’ rice were mischief makers.
The
Director-General, NBMA, Dr. Rufus Ebegba, made the clarification during a press
briefing in Abuja.
He
said the Federal Government was mindful of the safety of Nigerians and as such
would not open its borders to what had not been properly released and accepted
in other countries.
He
said, “The attention of the NBMA has been drawn to a certain online post that a
firm and the government of Nigeria have flooded the Nigerian market with the GM
rice purported to be poisonous.
“This
falsehood definitely is the product of the writer’s imagination, who probably
is using a pseudo name.
“As
a regulatory body established by the government to regulate the activities of
modern biotechnology and the release and use of genetically modified organisms
in the country to ensure safety to the environment and human health, the NBMA
wishes to state that there is no iota of truth in the said post and reinstates
that no GM rice has either been imported or released officially into the
country.
“In
a bid to cast aspersions on the modest efforts of the government towards the
adoption of safe biotechnology in Nigeria, the writer craftly and maliciously
laced his post with poison to cause unnecessary public panic.”
Ebegba
said a survey had been conducted by the agency and it was discovered that there
is no genetically modified rice in Nigeria.
He
said with the ban placed by the government on the importation of rice into the
county, it would be difficult for such type of product to find its way into the
Nigerian market
He
added, “No GM rice has been commercially released anywhere in the world. It
should also be recalled that the government has banned the importation of rice
in Nigeria. This ban was widely publicized in the media and there are no
indications that the ban has been lifted.
“The
NBMA therefore enjoins Nigerians to disregard the post and join hands with the
agency in its quest to ensure safety in the practice of modern biotechnology in
Nigeria in line with global best practices.”
He said that the agency would continue to carry out its functions effectively and would not compromise on its mandate.
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