

PLANT BIOTECHNOLOGY ISSUES - Greenpeace Co-Founder Denounces Anti-Biotech Former Colleagues
NEWS For Immediate Release
Contact: Cyril Boynes, Jr. 212-598-4000
January 15, 2004
CORE to hold teach-in, demand end to "Eco-Imperialism" Greenpeace co-founder to denounce his former colleagues
NEW YORK. The Congress of Racial Equality, one of
America's premier civil rights organizations,
will convene a teach-in on Tuesday, January 20,
at the Sheraton New York Hotel and Towers, to
condemn the global green movement's oppression of
poor people in the Third World.
"The environmental movement I helped found has
lost its objectivity, morality and humanity,"
says Greenpeace co-founder and conference
panelist Dr. Patrick Moore. "The pain and
suffering it inflicts on families in developing
countries can no longer be tolerated."
Moore will be one of eight experts from around
the world will demonstrate from first-hand
experience how environmental extremists deny
destitute nations electricity, and deepen the
poverty, malaria, malnutrition, tuberculosis and
dysentery that kill their people.
"We intend to stop this callous
eco-manslaughter," says CORE national spokesman
Niger Innis. "The green movement imposes the
views of mostly wealthy, comfortable Americans
and Europeans on mostly poor, desperate Africans,
Asians and Latin Americans. It violates their
most basic human rights. CORE will lay down the
gauntlet. Eco-imperialism may not be a household
word yet, but it will be after this conference,
the first one to address these issues."
Every year, malaria makes 200 million people so
sick that they cannot work, attend school,
cultivate their fields or care for their
families. Most of the cases are in sub-Saharan
Africa, leaving that region one of the most
destitute on Earth. Two million people a year
die from malaria - half of them children, and 90
percent of them in Africa.
A major reason for the malaria epidemic is the
radical environmentalists and World Health
Organization's near-total ban on DDT, perhaps the
most effective mosquito killer and repellant in
existence. "Europeans and Americans can afford to
deceive themselves about malaria and pesticides.
But we can't." says Fiona Kobusingye, who came
all the way from Kampala, Uganda to participate
in the event and tell her personal story.
The average European cow gets a $250-a-year
subsidy. Meanwhile, a billion people struggle to
survive on just $200 a year, Innis notes. More
than 2 billion have neither electricity nor
running water, and none of the basic necessities
and conveniences Americans take for granted - all
because of the greens' ideological opposition to
energy and economic development in the Third
World.
"We must put humanity back into the environmental
debate," says Innis. "We all want to protect our
planet. But we must stop trying to protect it
from bogus or illusory threats - and on the
backs, and the graves, of the world's most
powerless and impoverished people."
WHAT: Eco-Imperialism: The global green
movement's war on the developing world's poor
WHEN: Tuesday, January 20 - 1:00 to 4:00 pm
WHERE: Conference Room D, Sheraton New York Hotel
& Towers, 53rd Street & 7th Avenue
WHO: Roger Bate, Africa Fighting Malaria, UK;
Cyril Boynes, Jr., CORE, USA; Paul Driessen,
author of Eco-Imperialism: Green Power · Black
Death, USA; Niger Innis, CORE, USA; Fiona
Kobusingye, businesswoman, Uganda; Patrick Moore,
Greenspirit, Canada; Deroy Murdock, Atlas
Economic Research Foundation, USA; CS Prakash,
Tuskegee University, USA and India.
At the teach-in's conclusion, journalists and
other attendees can meet and interview the
experts, who will also be available for print, TV
and radio interviews during their time in New
York.
=======
Every year, 500,000 children around the world go
blind, as a result of vitamin A deficiency, notes
Dr. CS Prakash, professor of plant genetics at
Tuskegee University and a native of India. Two
million die from problems directly related to
this simple lack of a common vitamin, often
because they are so malnourished they cannot
survive the malaria, dysentery and other diseases
that also afflict them. "Golden rice" could help
end these problems, but radical greens oppose its
use, because it was developed using precise
genetic engineering methods.
"Environmental activists who've never had to
worry about starvation, malaria and simple
survival have no right to impose their fears,
prejudices and ideologies on the world's poor,"
Dr. Prakash says. "By orchestrating unfounded
scare stories that biotech crops are unsafe or
untested, they put huge road blocks on the
development of plant genetic engineering that
could bring economic prosperity to the rural poor
in Uganda and Bangladesh."
To a significant degree, Innis stresses, these
problems have been prolonged and worsened as a
direct result of eco-centric policies that oppose
the use of pesticides, biotechnology and fossil
fuels. This cannot be allowed to continue, he and
the other panelists will demonstrate.
"Eco-imperialism perpetuates poverty and misery.
It's hypocritical and immoral, unethical and
socially irresponsible. Worst of all, it's
lethal. It simply has to end," adds panelist Paul
Driessen, author of Eco-Imperialism: Green Power
- Black Death, and himself a former member of the
Sierra Club and Zero Population Growth. "It's
time to hold these groups accountable and compel
organizations, foundations, courts and policy
makers to understand the consequences of the
policies they are imposing on our Earth's poorest
citizens."
"The most recent WHO report on malaria makes
virtually no mention of indoor residual spraying
programs, using DDT," says Dr. Roger Bate of
Africa Fighting Malaria and the American
Enterprise Institute. "And when it is mentioned,
it is done in a very negative way that ignores
the great success South Africa and other
countries have had with these programs. It's as
though this great success has been scientifically
cleansed from the literature."
"When I helped create Greenpeace in 1971,"
reflects Dr. Moore, "I had no idea it would
evolve into a band of scientific illiterates who
use Gestapo tactics to silence people who wish to
express their views in a civilized forum. I had
no idea the movement would oppose genetic
engineering and other programs that could benefit
mankind - and adopt zero-tolerance policies that
so clearly expose its intellectual and moral
bankruptcy."
"Cute, indigenous customs - the kind
environmental groups say they are trying to
safeguard - mean indigenous poverty, indigenous
malnutrition, indigenous disease and childhood
death," points out Kenyan Akinyi Arunga, who is
on travel and will not be able to participate in
the event. "I don't wish this on my worst enemy,
and I wish our so-called friends would stop
imposing it on us."