The farmer who has tackled Monsanto and won, Paul Francois.
February 13, 2012
In a major victory for public health, and what will hopefully
lead to other nations taking action, a French court decided today that GMO crops monster Monsanto is guilty of chemically poisoning a
French farmer.
In the first such case heard in court in France, grain grower Paul Francois, 47,
says he suffered neurological problems including memory loss, headaches and
stammering after inhaling Monsanto's Lasso weedkiller in 2004.
The monumental case paves the way for legal action against Monsanto’s Roundup and other harmful herbicides and pesticides made by other manufacturers.
In a ruling given by a court in Lyon (southeast
France), Francois says that Monsanto failed to provide proper warnings on
the product label. The court ordered an expert opinion to determine the sum of
the damages, and to verify the link between Lasso and the reported illnesses.
The case is extremely important, as previous legal action taken against
Monsanto by farmers has failed due to the challenge of properly linking
pesticide exposure with the experienced side effects.
"It is a historic decision in so far as it is the first
time that a (pesticide) maker is found guilty of such a poisoning,"
François Lafforgue, Francois's lawyer, told Reuters.
Monsanto said it was disappointed by the ruling and would
examine whether to appeal the judgment.
"Monsanto always considered
that there were not sufficient elements to establish a causal relationship
between Paul Francois's symptoms and a potential poisoning," the company's
lawyer, Jean-Philippe Delsart, said.
When contacted by Reuters, Monsanto’s lawyers declined to comment.
MONSANTO’S DEADLY CONCOCTIONS
Farmer Paul Francois was not alone in his quest to hold Monsanto accountable for their actions. He and other farmers affected by Monsanto’s deadly concoctions actually founded an association last year to make the case that their health problems were a result of Monsanto’s Lasso and other ‘crop protection’ products. These previous health claims from farmers have foundered because of the difficulty of establishing clear links between illnesses and exposure to pesticides.
MONSANTO’S DEADLY CONCOCTIONS
Farmer Paul Francois was not alone in his quest to hold Monsanto accountable for their actions. He and other farmers affected by Monsanto’s deadly concoctions actually founded an association last year to make the case that their health problems were a result of Monsanto’s Lasso and other ‘crop protection’ products. These previous health claims from farmers have foundered because of the difficulty of establishing clear links between illnesses and exposure to pesticides.
Francois and other farmers suffering from illness set up an
association last year to make a case that their health problems should be
linked to their use of crop protection products.
The agricultural branch of the
French social security system says that since 1996, it has gathered farmers'
reports of sickness potentially related to pesticides, with about 200 alerts a
year.
But only about 47 cases have
been recognized as due to pesticides in the past 10 years. Francois, who
suffers from neurological problems, obtained work invalidity status only after
a court appeal.
LESS INTENSIVE NOW
The Francois case goes back to a
period of intensive use of crop-protection chemicals in the European Union. The
EU and its member countries have since banned a large number of substances
considered dangerous.
Lasso, a pre-emergent
soil-applied herbicide that has been used since the 1960s to control grasses
and broadleaf weeds in farm fields, was banned in France in 2007 following an
EU directive after the product had already been withdrawn in some other
countries.
Though it once was a top-selling
herbicide, it has gradually lost popularity, and critics say several studies
have shown links to a range of health problems.
Monsanto's Roundup is now the
dominant herbicide used to kill weeds. The company markets it in conjunction
with its biotech herbicide-tolerant "Roundup Ready" crops. The
Roundup Ready corn, soybeans, cotton and other crops do not die when sprayed
directly with the herbicide, a trait that has made them wildly popular with
U.S. farmers.
But farmers are now being
encouraged to use more and different kinds of chemicals again as Roundup loses
its effectiveness to a rise of "super weeds" that are resistant to
Roundup.
And while the risks of pesticide
are a generally known and accepted hazard of farming in most places, and
farmers are cautioned to take care when handling the chemicals, increased use
of pesticides will only cause more harm to human health and the environment,
critic say.
"The registration process
does not protect against harm. Manufacturers have to be held liable for adverse
impacts that occur," said Jay Feldman, director of Beyond Pesticides, a
non-profit group focused on reducing pesticide use.
France, the EU's largest
agricultural producer, is now targeting a 50 percent reduction in pesticide use
between 2008 and 2018, with initial results showing a 4 percent cut in farm and
non-farm use in 2008-2010.
The Francois claim may be easier
to argue than others because he can pinpoint a specific incident ~ inhaling the
Lasso when cleaning the tank of his crop sprayer ~ whereas fellow farmers are
trying to show accumulated effects from various products.
"It's like lying on a bed of
thorns and trying to say which one cut you," said a farmer, who has recovered
from prostate cancer and asked not to be named.
The French association of crop
protection companies, UIPP, says pesticides are all subject to testing and that
any evidence of a cancer risk in humans leads to withdrawal of products from
the market.
"I think if we had a major
health problem with pesticides, we would have already known about it,"
Jean-Charles Bocquet, UIPP's managing director, said.
The social security's farming
branch this year is due to add Parkinson's disease to its list of conditions
related to pesticide use after already recognizing some cases of blood cancers
and bladder and respiratory problems.
France's health and environment
safety agency (ANSES), meanwhile, is conducting a study on farmers' health,
with results expected next year.
'I am alive today, but part of the farming population is going
to be sacrificed and is going to die because of this,' Francois, 47, told
Reuters.
Hello Noor,
ReplyDeleteHuge numbers of people are eliminated/disappeared at the whim of the elites, so the despoiling of land is not all surprising - both are totally wrong - completely evil.
They want not only your life and land but your mind as well; Attacks on individuals via unlawful kidnappers via unlawful CIA-MKULTRA .... They know no bounds to their evil: Assassination of Admiral Boorda included in THE CLINTON BODY-COUNT
Some, like the farmer on his land, are fighting back, good! GOPOversight - letter from @DarrellIssa to #Holder - Issa takes step toward holding Holder in contempt of Congress