The developing world, including India, should adopt
genetically modified (GM) crops, Nobel laureate Richard John Roberts
said here on Tuesday. Rallying behind GM crops, Mr. Roberts said he is
not alone in GM advocacy as he has garnered the support of 75 other
Nobel laureates for it.
Dig at Greenpeace
“Environmental
organisations such as Greenpeace oppose GMO for political ends. There
is no truth in their claim as there is no scientific proof that GM crops
are harmful,” Mr. Roberts emphasised in a media interaction that
followed his lecture organised by the Centre for Cellular and Molecular
Biology and the Telangana Academy of Science.
Standing
by his pro-GM stand, he said millions of people in the third world
would die of starvation unless GM crops were introduced.
“We
have been breeding crops for long naturally. I would call GM precision
plant breeding. Greenpeace is in the business of scaring people when it
comes to GM crops,” he said.
The Nobel laureate was
in the city to deliver the CCMB’s distinguished lecture series. Mr.
Roberts who won the prestigious prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1993
asked: “If technology can support starvation crisis, why not use it?”
Mr. Roberts, however, said private investment in medical research should not be supported.
“In
the West, the drug manufacturers are not interested in cure as they
want to keep people dependent on drugs. Countries in the developing
world should not follow this model of capitalism,” Mr. Roberts said.
‘Chase your passion’
In the distinguished lecture, Mr. Roberts asked scientists to follow their passion.
“I
wanted to be a detective when I was a child, but later developed an
interest in science as my parents gifted me a chemistry kit,” said Mr.
Roberts, who developed his taste in research at a very young age.
“My
first experiments were to make fire crackers,” he said. Someone who
still likes jazz music and caving, Mr. Roberts had shared the Nobel
Prize with Phil Sharp. A British citizen, he was knighted in 2008.
Data that may be helpful:
Important Points:-
- Sir Richard John Roberts is an English biochemist and molecular biologist. He was awarded the 1993 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Phillip Allen Sharp for the discovery of introns in eukaryotic DNA and the mechanism of gene-splicing.
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