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						Chinese citizens sue 
						government over transparency on Monsanto herbicide 
			
   
            
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		[April 08, 2015] 
		By Dominique Patton 
			
		BEIJING (Reuters) - Three Chinese citizens 
		are taking China's Ministry of Agriculture to court in a bid to make 
		public a toxicology report supporting the approval of Monsanto's popular 
		weedkiller, Roundup, 27 years ago. 
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			 The case, a rare example of a lawsuit by private citizens against 
			the Chinese government, comes amid renewed attention on glyphosate, 
			the key ingredient in Roundup, after a controversial report by a 
			World Health Organization group last month found it to be "probably 
			carcinogenic to humans" - a claim denied by Monsanto. 
			 
			It also underlines the deep-seated fears held by some Chinese over 
			genetically modified food. 
			 
			Beijing No.3 Intermediate People's Court had accepted the case but a 
			date for a hearing has not yet been set, an official at the court 
			told Reuters. 
			 
			Roundup is widely used on crops like soybeans that are genetically 
			modified to resist its impact, allowing farmers to kill weeds 
			without killing their crops. China imports about 65 percent of the 
			world's traded soybeans. 
			 
			"The government is taking actions to deal with other food safety 
			issues but it is not dealing with the GMO problem," said Yang Xiaolu, 
			62, one of the plaintiffs bringing the case and a long-time GMO 
			activist. 
			  
			Monsanto officials have said glyphosate has been proven safe for 
			decades, and the company has demanded a retraction from the WHO over 
			its recent report. 
			 
			Yang and the other plaintiffs, Li Xiangzhen and Tian Xiangping, are 
			demanding in the lawsuit that the agriculture ministry make public 
			the animal test that the ministry cited as evidence to support its 
			approval of Roundup in 1988. 
			 
			The test report by U.S.-based Younger Laboratories in 1985 was 
			provided by Monsanto to the ministry, according to the plaintiffs, 
			who argue that the ministry should allow the public to know how it 
			determined that Roundup was safe. 
			 
			The ministry has previously declined to show the plaintiffs the 
			report, arguing that it would infringe on Monsanto's commercial 
			secrets, said Yang. 
			 
			The agriculture ministry did not respond to a fax seeking comment. 
			 
			The lawsuit comes at a time when the government is trying to foster 
			positive public opinion of GMO food crops, currently banned for 
			cultivation, but seen as crucial to future food security. 
			
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			GMO seeds under development for China include those that are 
			resistant to glyphosate. 
			 
			Yang is one of a growing number of activists lodging information 
			disclosure requests amid government promises to become more 
			transparent. 
			 
			The central government has pledged at recent high-level meetings to 
			improve the rule of law and to step up transparency on sensitive 
			issues such as pollution. 
			But underscoring the difficulty in challenging the government a 
			Beijing court this week ruled against a similar demand by lawyer 
			Huang Leping for the agriculture ministry to disclose more detail on 
			its imports of genetically modified crops and plans for allowing 
			cultivation in China. 
			 
			In the case sparked by the latest lawsuit, the court notified the 
			plaintiffs that Monsanto would be added as a party to the case, said 
			Yang. Monsanto Asia corporate affairs director Yong Gao said he had 
			received no communication from the court and declined to comment on 
			the case. 
			 
			The company made 5.3 percent of its $15.9 billion in revenues last 
			year from Asia-Pacific markets. The firm's last relevant patent on 
			glyphosate expired in 2000 and China is now the biggest producer of 
			the herbicide. 
			 
			(Additional reporting by Beijing Newsroom; Editing by Gavin Maguire 
			and Ed Davies) 
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				reserved.] Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
			
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