All 26 cantons (administrative regions) that make up Switzerland voted
unanimously against GE crops and animals being grown in the country.
The national vote was 55.7
percent in favour of the ban but reached a high of 75.8 percent in the
farming canton of Jura. The farmers of Switzerland are concerned not
only with the
uncertain health effects of GE crops but also that GE contamination
would ruin their fast-growing organic farming sector.
The ban doesn't rid Switzerland of GE completely as GE field trials
will still be allowed under the new moratorium and products deriving
from animals fed on GE crops can still be imported into the country.
Pending applications for GE food and animal feed could also still be
approved.
"Greenpeace hopes Switzerland's rejection of GE crops inspires others
around the world to stand up and say 'no' to genetic engineering. We
also encourage the Swiss public to continue to voice its opposition to
this highly risky technology. Every route of contamination must be
closed before people can rest assured their plants and the food on
their plates is not contaminated," said Geert Ritsema, Greenpeace
International GE campaigner.
Switzerland is unique in the world in that it allows its citizens a
direct say in how they are governed via regular referenda. With the
latest vote going against GE, the biotech companies like Monsanto and
Switzerland's own Syngenta must be hoping that the democratic urge
doesn't escape the land-locked country and spread to other lands.
The people of Switzerland are fortunate that their government takes
into account their views before deciding important issues like the
release of GE crops into the environment. Across many parts of the
world, public opinion is similarly in opposition. But some
governments, seduced by promises of riches, have
been quick to bypass or suppress public opposition and grant permission
for biotech companies to contaminate the environment with genetically
engineered crops.
With the US, Canada and Argentina trying to force GE food onto European
consumers
via the WTO, the Swiss vote shows that the pro-GE forces are
losing their grip. The rights of people to determine what food is
permissible from the farm gate to their dining table must be respected.
With the Swiss voting against GE crops, the biotech industry must now
realise what the opinion polls across the world has been showing for a
long time, people don't want GE food.