Development and
Cooperation

March and July/August edition

Letters to the editor

Readers' feedback to the articles of Joachim von Braun in the March edition and to the focus section and the new column "Nowadays" in our July/August edition.

Weeds and genetical modification

D+C/E+Z 2012/03, p. 112 f., Joachim von Braun (in our interview on agriculture): “Recent developments are promising”

I am impressed by your calm reasoning, especially in regard to GMOs. I have been working as a missionary and supporting farmers in Tanzania for 44 years. As best I can in an African village, I follow the development debate.

I find it striking that nobody seems to discuss the core challenge for African farmers: small fields. In most African countries, however, there would be enough land. In Tanzania, only about 10 % of arable land is cultivated. In Zambia, the share is a mere 4.1 %. The reason is weeds. African family farms cannot cultivate more land because they cannot cope with weeds on more than 2,3 acres or so.

The main advantage of the GMOs that are in use today – in particular soy and maize – is that there is no need for weeding. When I ask farmers here on how much land they would plant maize, soy or cotton if it were not for the weed problem, the response is always 10 acres. It is a scandal that African governments, incited by European NGOs, are forbidding their farmers to use life-saving and poverty-reducing technology.

Pater Athanas Meixner, Soni, Lushoto District,Tanzania

Latest Articles

Malnourishment

Stunted growth

India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi with China’s President Xi Jinping in Wuhan last year

Emerging markets

Allied rivals

People visiting a military exposition in Tehran in February 2019.

Geo-strategic danger

How sanctions can cause war

Most viewed articles