Risky Second-Generation GE Strategies for Africa

THIRD WORLD NETWORK BIOSAFETY INFORMATION SERVICE

 

Dear Friends and Colleagues

Risky Second-Generation GE Strategies for Africa

Africa is experiencing several health and food crises, which are aggravated by biodiversity loss, climate change and the coronavirus pandemic. A recent paper exposes how a new wave of second-generation genetic engineering (GE) strategies is being used to reinvigorate the GE push on the African continent, with diverse projects purporting biotechnological solutions to malaria and locust infestations.

These novel forms of second-generation GE technologies, such as gene drive technologies, genome editing, paratransgenesis and cisgenesis, are increasing the scope, scale, depth and flexibility of interventions that can be performed by the biotech industry, including GE wild populations and ecosystems. There is increased focus on wild insect populations, in particular, the control or suppression of mosquitoes that transmit malaria.

As with first-generation GMOs, second-generation GMOs will continue to divert attention and investment away from sovereign systemic solutions to combat ecological, economic and health crises. Resources could be far better spent if dedicated to alleviating the real issues of overreliance on ecosystems, deepening inequalities, derelict infrastructure and lack of sanitation, which if addressed, would make a much greater dent in changing malaria endemicity in sub-Saharan Africa than with risky GE projects.

With best wishes,

Third World Network
131 Jalan Macalister
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Malaysia
Email: twn@twnetwork.org
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PROFITEERING FROM HEALTH AND ECOLOGICAL CRISIS IN AFRICA: THE TARGET MALARIA PROJECT AND NEW RISKY GE TECHNOLOGIES

African Centre for Biodiversity
1 June 2020

The ACB shares this research paper with you, of the wave of ‘Trojan horse’ second-generation genetic engineering strategies targeted at, inter alia, malaria in Africa, at a time when the COVID-19 crisis is fracturing the myth that global health expertise is the domain of North America and Europe. Global health can no longer be defined by Western nations, as the world watches with astonishment and agony how the West needlessly loses lives, as a result of hubris and failure to learn from other nations in the South and their knowledge systems. Indeed, Western science has long been used to justify imperialist projects, as well as provide the tools for their application, while denigrating and simultaneously appropriating other scientific systems in the process. 

Second-generation GMOs produced from gene drive technologies, genome editing, paratransgenesis and cisgenesis are increasing the scope, scale, depth and flexibility of interventions that can be performed by the biotech industry, including genetically engineering of wild populations and ecosystems. Research and development (R&D) projects are largely financed by European and North American institutions; the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF); and the US military research arm – the US Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).

Their “discovery” research is focused on wild insect populations, for the alleged advancement of health in Africa, pertaining to the control or suppression of mosquitoes that transmit malaria in Burkina Faso, Mali, Uganda, Ghana and Zambia. Further, GE research is looking at controlling locust populations with a GE metarhizium fungus, following the devastating infestation in East Africa, while DARPA is also spearheading research to deliver a GM virus that will “improve” crop growth under the auspices of the “Insect Allies” project.

These technologies represent ‘epistemic colonisation’ that emanate from the very systems that have caused/aggravated current crises. The Gates Foundation, for example, is also investing directly in chemical corporations, agribusiness, weapons producers, and food/retail industries that are creating the very problems they purport to address.

Systems of extraction for profit and wanton plunder of Africa are not novel, and are rooted in colonial, capitalist systems built off human and environmental exploitation. It is this that has resulted in gross economic inequalities, environmental destruction and collapsing health care systems. The current COVID-19 crisis has bluntly revealed that the upsetting of equilibria that nature provides through deforestation is linked not only to the COVID-19 but also to human infectious such as malaria and leishmaniasis. Resources could be far better spent if it were directed to overreliance on ecosystems, deepening inequalities, derelict infrastructure and lack of sanitation, which if addressed, would make a much greater dent in changing malaria endemicity in sub-Saharan Africa than the risky and dangerous colonial projects supported by the Gates Foundation and the Target Malaria project.

As with first-generation GMOs, second-generation GMOs will divert attention and investment away from sovereign systemic solutions to combat the ecological, economic and health crises on the continent. Systemic solutions can prosper from a clean break from the failed promises of first- and second-generation GMOs and their underlying, hopelessly failed ideologies.

PLEASE CLICK HERE TO READ THE BRIEFING PAPER.

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