The permanent secretary of Tanzania’s Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, Florens Turuka, has confirmed the country’s readiness to transact business on GM crops.
Speaking at the launch of the ISAAA Global Report on Commercialized Biotech/GM Crops (2015), Turuka said the government intends to revolutionize agriculture in the African country by introducing biotech crops to improve the quality of yields.
“We want to make sure that the quality of the yields that we are harvesting is improved. We believe this report we have launched will help us show the public on how other countries are benefiting from agri-biotechnology,” he said.
Gerald Monela, Vice Chancellor, Sokoine University of Agriculture, the host of the event, echoed Turuka’ sentiments, adding that the country has the required capacity for research on GM crops.
“Our experts here at the university will follow internationally accepted guidelines to conduct the research on GM crops.”
Monela urged the public not to worry and asked leaders “who because of misinformation, might have said inaccurate things, that have instilled fear in the public to reassure them of the safety standards in place.”
The meeting was organized by the Open Forum on Agricultural Biotechnology in Tanzania in collaboration with the Tanzania Commission for Science and Technology (COSTECH) at the Sokoine University of Agriculture (SUA) in Morogoro, Eastern Tanzania, on May 30, 2016. It was attended by 90 participants, including farmers, scientists, representatives from academia and media.