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Cows Dance on Sainsbury's Roof to launch National actions against GM animal feed

Genetic Engineering Network | 02.03.2004 11:49 | Bio-technology

Anti GM animal feed actions at 7 sainsbury's supermarkets


Across the country this Saturday (28 Jan 04), in seven different Sainsbury’s
supermarkets, disgruntled shoppers and bandit labellers took to the aisles to
protest against the company’s ongoing use of GM to feed the cows that produce
their dairy products. Local grassroots groups linked by GEN (The Genetic
Engineering Network) organized the event, and more protests are promised
across the country in the next few weeks. In Exeter, Sherbourne, Taunton,
Coventry, Bracknell, Wales, Plymouth and London shoppers were leafleted and
GM fed dairy products labelled. The idea is simple- To stop the growing of
GM crops by ensuring that there is no market for the GM fodder maize the
government are trying to commercialise. In Holland, supermarkets made a
commitment not to use GM feed, and although they have GM maize with full
approval no one's planted any. Sainsbury's are seen as the first domino in
the chain that needs pushing, because the big boys like Tesco won't go until
they do, and they're financially vunerable at the moment as well as being
linked to everyones favourite pro GM science minister- Lord Sainsbury.
Although not all the reports are back in yet, here's what happened in the
South West:

In Exeter's Alfingnton Road Sainsbury's two dancing Friesians occupied the
roof with a banner declaring “GM FED DAIRY- untested, unlabelled and in here”
and stayed there for over two hours. Meanwhile a banner, lifted on two giant
helium balloons, hung from the ceiling inside the store, (alas not for long-
the ceiling was a bit low for the 5ft wide banner and 4ft diameter balloons).
The tannoy was briefly taken over by protesters warning shoppers of
Sainsbury’s policy. A cow and a giant mutant maize handed out leaflets
inside, before being forceably ejected, and three of the checkout girls spent
their break outside with the protesters, asked for leaflets and quietly said-
'good on you, we agree'. The police were called, but were almost
embarrassingly co-operative, and there were no arrests, despite the entire
milk and dairy stock being labelled by 17 other protesters (which resulted in
the deputy manager running out screaming to the police 'they've done criminal
damage to our cheese!'). Almost all of the labelled products were
subsequently removed by the staff, which will have amounted to a not
insubstantial loss to Sainsbury's. There was a strong media interest
(hampered by technical difficulties at the GEN end on the day). By none the
less local TV and radio covered the story and all the local papers are
running the full story and pictures.

In Plymouth people leafleted for an hour and a half both inside and outside
the shop before the police were called and GM fed products were also labelled
inside the store.

GM, by the supermarket’s own admission, is currently fed to the cows that
produce their dairy products, as well as to the cattle and pigs that make
their beef and pork in their non-specialist ranges. Yet there is no labelling
to alert shoppers to the presence of this GM in the food chain. The Co-op
and Marks & Spencers already sell totally non-GM reared meat and dairy as
standard, due to deep customer concerns about the issue.

They have good reason to be worried. Bob Orskov OBE, Director of the
International Feed Resource Unit in Aberdeen has said that “As a scientist I
wouldn't drink milk from cows fed GM maize with the present state of
knowledge”.

Sainsbury’s claim that they haven't kept their promise because of their
‘concern about the commercial impact of this on farmers’. Yet the appallingly
low price that Sainsbury’s currently pays farmers for their milk is causing a
crisis in agriculture, while they and the other major supermarkets cream off
huge profits on the massive mark up on the shelves. John Sherrall, the
Chairman of FARM 'The independent voice of farmers' explained-

“Sainsbury's suppliers now pay farmers less than their production cost for
their milk. GM maize will not end this injustice but contaminate neighbouring
farms and food crops, destroying more livelihoods”

The protesters in Exeter were supported by customers – who attached flags
with the message 'support farmers, not GM' to their trolleys and who went to
the Customer Services desk to demand that 'Sainsbury's start paying a fair
price for GM free milk.'

One of the campaigners added-
“Safe food is a right, not a privilege, and at the moment people don’t even
know what’s going into the food chain. A lot of the customers we’ve talked to
are shocked that this backdoor into GM exists and they aren’t being told
about it. After all the evidence about the environmental and agricultural
damage caused by GM crops, and with the shadow of BSE hanging over us, isn’t
it about time Sainsbury’s kept it’s promise?”

These are the tactics which got GM ingredients labelled and off the
supermarket shelves five years ago- and started the seizing-up of the Biotech
industry. They work. If you want an info pack with action ideas, labels and
Sainsbury's specific leaflets contact GEN via 01803 840098.
ENDS

Editors notes:

1. The first GM crop being proposed for commercial growing in the UK is a
kind of GM maize to be used as cattle fodder.
2. Over 80% of GM crops grown globally are for animal feed, after the
widespread public rejection of the technology in food

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Genetic Engineering Network
- Homepage: http://www.geneticsaction.org.uk

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