Deutsche Welle, 25 October 2013
Monsanto
pesticides are causing birth defects and cancer in Argentina, according to a
new report. In a farming community near Córdoba, residents say they have been
poisoned by pesticides used in soy fields.
Sofía
Gatica sits in the sun on a café patio in the Argentine city of Córdoba. She
talks about raising her three children in Ituzaingó, a Córdoba suburb
surrounded by soy fields. In the mid-1990s her oldest son became extremely ill.
"When
he was four years old, he came down with the illness that left him temporarily
paralyzed," she recalls. "He was admitted to the hospital. They told
me that they didn't know what was wrong with him."
The Gatica
family lived just fifty meters from fields planted with genetically-modified soy. Planes regularly flew overhead, spraying the plants with the herbicide
glyphosate. Slowly, the entire suburb started getting sick.
Argentina is the world's third-largest soy producer |
In 1999,
Sofía Gatica gave birth to her fourth baby, a little girl. Three days later,
the baby died of kidney failure. The loss of her child prompted Gatica to take
action. She decided to find out what was happening in her neighborhood.
"I
went door-to-door and did a survey - asking each mother for the sick person's
name, address, clinic, everything. And each mother sent me to another, and to
another, and so on."
Major
health consequences
Soon Sofia
Gatica was joined by others. "The mothers started to come help me, to tell
me, 'Look, I have another sick person.' They came to me by themselves and
decided to join the struggle."
The group
named themselves the Mothers of Ituzaingó. They took their survey to the
government and demanded an immediate investigation. In 2002, the government
agreed.
The results
were alarming. The area's water supply was polluted, and eighty percent of the
neighborhood's children had agrotoxins in their blood.
Around this
time, a doctor at the University of Buenos Aires - Andrés Carrasco - proved
that the herbicide glyphosate can cause birth defects in vertebrates. "In
most cases, the fetus dies before birth because of its deformities,"
Carrasco explain said in an interview with DW. "The inhalation or the
introduction of these agrotoxins kills the embryo."
According
to a new report from the Associated Press, there are similar cases being
recorded across Argentina. Monsanto herbicides and pesticides are drifting into
residential communities and seeping into water sources, farmers are using the
chemicals without proper protective gear and discarded pesticide containers are
being used to store water and other farm goods.
The report
signals growing concern among doctors, who warn that these chemicals may be the
cause of rising cancer rates, birth defects and respiratory illness. Cancer
rates in Santa Fe are reportedly two to four times higher than the national
average. In Chaco, birth defects quadrupled in the ten years after
biotechnology for improving crop yields was introduced.
Pesticides
for food security
In the
mid-1990s, Monsanto introduced soybean seeds engineered to resist herbicide.
Argentine farmers were quick to start using it in their fields, which improved
productivity and eventually turned the country into the urned the country into
the world's third largest soy producing nation. Despite the growing
anti-pesticide and anti-GMO movements, many farmers remain convinced that
Argentina’s economic stability and future food security depends on the
continued use of Monsanto’s products.
César
Soldano has been farming in Córdoba and the nearby province of Santiago del
Estero for three decades. He plants soy and corn in the spring and summer, and
wheat and garbanzo beans in the winter. The land where he now farms wasn't
productive until he started using genetically-modified soy beans and the
glyphosate herbicide.
"This
was all scrubland," Soldano says, gesturing to his fields and adds that
glyphosate enabled him to transform the landscape.
"Monsanto's
'Roundup-Ready' soy means that the soil doesn't have to be turned,"
Soldano continues. "The glyphosate destroys all plant growth except the
soybean. This makes it possible to conserve water and grow crops."
Argentine soy is considered essential for food supply as the global population grows |
"Our
crops were not productive. And when this technological change came about,
everything changed radically," Soldano notes. "The person who was
able to alter the plant's nucleus in order to improve our food crops deserves a
Nobel Prize."
Soldano
points out that genetically-modified soy has also made an important impact on
Argentina's economy. Almost ten percent of the national government's budget
comes from taxes on soy.
Attacks on
anti-pesticide campaigners
Sofía
Gatica, however, doesn't believe the short-term economic benefits make the
long-term damage worthwhile. Her continued protests against
genetically-modified crops and the pesticides used with them has made her a
target. She was harassed for two years by a woman who met her at the bus stop
and insulted her for the entire forty-minute bus ride to work.
Once, Gatica
says, a man appeared at her home and threatened her with a shotgun, telling her
to give up the fight against soy farmers. "Then the threatening phone
calls began. They told me that I had three children and that I would end up
with two. And it was awful not to know if your child would come home."
But Gatica
has continued to speak out against pesticides and GMO crops. And slowly, she
and other activists are gaining support. "Everyone is demanding
pesticide-free borders - for agrotoxins not to be sprayed near people. Some
places now have 1,500-meter (4,921-feet) borders, others 2,500 meters,"
Gatica says.
Soy is broadly used as animal feed, tofu and biodiesel |
In a
landmark case last year, a soy farmer and the pilot of a fumigation plane were
found guilty of spraying harmful herbicides near residential areas, says
Enrique Viale, the president of the Argentine Association of Environmentalist
Lawyers. "A court in Córdoba gave a verdict that, for the first time,
punished a farmer for the crime of polluting with agrotoxins," Viale says.
"The verdict is the product of the struggle by citizens, by women like
Sofía Gatica, by the Mothers of Ituzaingó. It's helpful and valuable as a
precedent, but it's not widespread yet."
Sofía
Gatica says she wants Argentina's government to strictly control the activities
of soy farmers. She wants genetically-modified soy and all the associated
chemicals banned - and the multinational companies that sell them to leave
Argentina. "The multinationals come here to steal our land, to kick out
the people who live on the land, to steal our water, and to sow death,"
she says.
But the
world's population is growing and soy from the farmlands of Argentina is
considered essential for ensuring food security for the future - making the
battle between anti-GMO campaigners and soy farmers far from over.
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