Russia taking McDonald’s to court, threatens countrywide shutdown

Yozilla said:
It is interesting to observe those steps made by Russia considering "food&agriculture... Maybe there are traces o some kind of planned strategy to implement higher nutritional standards by Moscow -

I agree, the U.S. sanctions may have given Russia the impetus it needed to get rid of tainted food products and the companies that are promoting them, which is the influx of American sponsored Companies and GMO's in the last 25 years.

I see China has decided not to "renew" a contract for growing experimental GMO Rice and Corn and which might be following the same foot paths as Russia, to implement higher nutritional standards. I would imagine, other BRICS Nations may follow?

Monsanto must be taking "a heavy hit' in the pocket!

End of the line: GMO production in China halted
_http://rt.com/news/181860-gm-china-rice-stopped/

Thursday August 21, 2014

In a surprise U-turn, China’s Ministry of Agriculture has decided not to continue with a program which developed genetically-modified rice and corn. Some environmentalists say public concerns about GM crops played a key role in the decision.

On August 17, when these permits were up for renewal, the Ministry of Agriculture decided not to extend them. In 2009, the ministry's Biosafety Committee issued approval certificates to develop the two crops, rice and corn.


Developed by the Huazhong Agricultural University, near Wuhan, it was hoped that the GMO strains would help to reduce pesticide use by 80 percent, while raising yields by as much as 8 percent, said Huang Jikun, the chief scientist with the Chinese Academy of Sciences, told Reuters in 2009. It is illegal to sell genetically-modified rice on the open market in China.

However in July, GM rice was found on sale in a large supermarket in Wuhan, which is just across the Yangtze River from the Huazhong Agricultural University, where the product was developed, which caused a public outcry.

"We believe that loopholes in assessing and monitoring [GMO] research, as well as the public concern around safety issues are the most important reasons that the certifications have not been renewed," Wang Jing, a Greenpeace official based in Beijing, wrote in an email to ScienceInsider.

According to the South China Morning Post, state television commissioned tests on five packets of rice, which were picked at random, and found three contained genetically-modified rice. It is illegal to sell or commercially grow GM rice in mainland China. The safety certificates issued in 2009 only allowed the rice to be planted for research purposes, but never for sale on the open market.

The strain, which was found, was one of two developed by Dr. Zhang Oifa, who is a professor at the Huazhong Agricultural University. He said, "it was not impossible" for the seeds to be put on to the open market.

"You can't say [the seeds] were leaked on purpose. It's possible the seed companies have taken away the seeds and reproduced them illegally," he said, as reported by the South China Morning Post.

However, Huang Jikun also believes that public opinion was not the only reason why the project was shelved. He stated that China is reaching self-sufficiency in terms of rice production, so therefore there was no point in producing genetically modified versions. China exports very little rice as almost all of it is consumed within its domestic market. Huang also admitted, "rising public concerns [about the] safety of GM rice" likely also played a role.

Cong Cao, who is an associate professor at the University of Nottingham in the UK, was scathing of the decision. Writing in ‘The Conversation’ journal, he said the move “signals a major blow to the fight to establish GM food in China.”

Cao believes there is no logic behind the judgment adding that “Anti-Western sentiment has been judged more convincing than a raft of studies endorsing the merits of agro-biotechnology. Government support for GM food is dwindling fast, and it seems safe to say that the opportunity to commercialize GM rice – and with it the chance to help address some of China’s most urgent problems – is all but gone.”

The production of GM corn has not received as much skepticism, as it is mainly fed to livestock, according to Huang Jikun. Nevertheless, like rice, it has also not had its license renewed.
 
angelburst29 said:
Four Moscow McDonalds shut by Russian consumer watchdog (Video)
_http://rt.com/news/181676-mcdonalds-russia-suspend-operation/

Wednesday August 20, 2014

Russia’s consumer watchdog has shut down four McDonald's restaurants in central Moscow – including the first-ever outlet in the country – over “administrative violations.” More of the company 430 Russian franchises are under investigation.

/.../

Apparently, it's not only Moscow, and not everyone is happy about that:

_http://translate.yandex.net/tr-url/ru-en.ru/59chaikovsky.ru/regional-news2/3503-makdonalds-zakryvayut-po-vsej-strane

McDonald's closing all over the country

McDonald's closing all over Russia. The raid on MacDonalds extends to the whole of Russia. Moscow was not the end.

In particular, in St. Petersburg began an unscheduled inspection of the network of fast food restaurants McDonald's. About this "Fontanka" said a source in the CPS [Rospotrebnadzor - The Federal Service for Supervision of Consumer Rights Protection and Human Welfare].

Before that it was closed four McDonald's restaurant in Moscow, including the oldest Russian restaurant McDonald's on Pushkin square.

The CPS at the same time began the verification of compliance with sanitary rules in chain restaurants in the Sverdlovsk oblast, Krasnodar Krai, Tatarstan and the Central Federal district.

Today the review started in both of Ulyanovsk restaurants McDonalds regional Rospotrebnadzor, here also
looking for violations of sanitary laws. In Ulyanovsk worked two McDonalds restaurant in the shopping center
"Plane" in the prospectus of Ulyanovsk and the SEC "Pushcharovskii ring". Reported that McDonald's restaurants suddenly everywhere began to break the rules of food storage and sanitary-epidemiological requirements.

Funny, right. Never broke, and suddenly at the same time began to break in all the cities.

McDonald's closed one after the other throughout Russia. Goodbye, McDonald's. Or farewell? [meaning: forever]
 
Possibility of Being said:
angelburst29 said:
Four Moscow McDonalds shut by Russian consumer watchdog (Video)
_http://rt.com/news/181676-mcdonalds-russia-suspend-operation/

Wednesday August 20, 2014

Russia’s consumer watchdog has shut down four McDonald's restaurants in central Moscow – including the first-ever outlet in the country – over “administrative violations.” More of the company 430 Russian franchises are under investigation.

/.../

Apparently, it's not only Moscow, and not everyone is happy about that:

_http://translate.yandex.net/tr-url/ru-en.ru/59chaikovsky.ru/regional-news2/3503-makdonalds-zakryvayut-po-vsej-strane

Yep, today Rospotrebnadzor also started the assessment of the local McDonald's restaurants (article in Russian). We actually have only two of them: the first one opened a month ago, another one - just a week ago. Considering the situation, Novosibirsk will probably forget about McD even before we actually get acquainted to it. I personally do not visit junk-food restaurants, but some people like them.

The situation is funny and absurd: four years ago Obama invited our president Dmitry Medvedev to lunch at McD, and today almost no McD is allowed in Russia. When will this pointless sanction war end, I wonder? Anyway, we may even benefit from this a bit: the less unhealthy food, the better. ;)

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Siberia said:
The situation is funny and absurd: four years ago Obama invited our president Dmitry Medvedev to lunch at McD, and today almost no McD is allowed in Russia. When will this pointless sanction war end, I wonder? Anyway, we may even benefit from this a bit: the less unhealthy food, the better. ;)

Yes, I think that Russians will actually benefit from it, health wise. Also consider China's recent decision to discontinue growing GMO rice and corn, and both countries are sending a strong message to the Universe. In comparison to them, US is like a walking GMO junk-food infested zombie nation.
 
Keit said:
Siberia said:
The situation is funny and absurd: four years ago Obama invited our president Dmitry Medvedev to lunch at McD, and today almost no McD is allowed in Russia. When will this pointless sanction war end, I wonder? Anyway, we may even benefit from this a bit: the less unhealthy food, the better. ;)

Yes, I think that Russians will actually benefit from it, health wise. Also consider China's recent decision to discontinue growing GMO rice and corn, and both countries are sending a strong message to the Universe. In comparison to them, US is like a walking GMO junk-food infested zombie nation.

Yes, GMO + junk-food is a deadly cocktail, for sure. The less such "food," the better for any nation. Junk food is historically not very popular in Russia (and in China probably), because our national cuisines differ a lot from the cola-and-hamburger traditions. When the Soviet Union collapsed, this food became popular at first, but now it's losing its attraction. People mostly prefer "home-like" food instead. I think that we should have some sort of anti-junk national policy: if not a strict ban, so that people could choose, then at least some good motivation for a healthy diet. We are moving in this direction now, as I see. And I hope that we will continue this way after the sanctions mess is over as well. Interesting, but it turns out that by imposing their bars on us, the West is actually pushing us to purify our land even quicker than we would do it without their pressure. ;)
 
A number of countries around the world have now completely banned GM food and the pesticides that go with them, or have severe restrictions against them. This comes after the world has experienced a massive resistance against Monsanto and other biotech giants that manufacture GMOs and pesticides.

Mexico is following suit with Russia and China.

Monsanto Loses GMO Permit In Mexico – Judge Sides With The Bees
_http://www.collective-evolution.com/2014/08/27/monsanto-loses-gmo-permit-in-mexico-judge-sides-with-the-bees/

Saturday August 30, 2014

Mexico is the fourth largest honey producer and fifth largest honey exporter in the world.

According to The Guardian:

“A district judge in the state of Yucatán last month overturned a permit issued to Monsanto by Mexico’s agriculture ministry, Sagarpa, and environmental protection agency, Semarnat, in June 2012 that allowed commercial planting of Round-up ready Soybeans. In withdrawing the permit, the judge was convinced by the scientific evidence presented about the threats posed by GM soy crops to honey production in the Yucatán peninsula, which includes Campeche, Quintana Roo and Yucatán states. Co-existence between honey production and GM soybeans is not possible, the judge ruled.” (source)
 
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