Nutrition
Foundation Short on Credibility
Press
Release: Soil and Health Association
NZFSA
and New Zealand Nutrition Foundation Short on Credibility.
"It
is time people retired or were fired from the New Zealand Food Safety Authority
(NZFSA) so New Zealanders might be given independent and reliable information
about food safety," said Soil & Health spokesperson Steffan Browning
today, adding that, "the New Zealand Nutrition Foundation was also a food
industry mouthpiece lacking credibility."
"The
information coming to the public from these two organisations is consistently
big food industry based, while the real independent and credible research, that
damns artificial sweetener aspartame's safety, is consistently ignored or crudely
glossed over."
"Yesterday
both agencies effectively used the Washington based food industry mouthpiece,
the International Food Information Council (IFIC) for their media release wording
and spin, while attempting to defend the use of the neurotoxin aspartame as a
sweetener. However they failed to mention who is funding IFIC."
Examples
of IFIC supporters in 2002 were:
Archer
Daniels Midland Company
Aventis CropScience
BASF
Burger King Corporation
Cargill, Incorporated
The Coca-Cola Company
Dow AgroSciences, LLC
DuPont Agricultural Products
Frito-Lay, Inc.
General Mills, Inc.
Gerber
Products Company
Hershey Foods Corporation
H. J. Heinz Company
Kellogg
USA, Inc.
Kraft Foods
McDonald Corporation
Monsanto Company
The
Pepsi-Cola Company
Nestle USA, Inc.
Taco Bell Corporation
The Procter
& Gamble Company
Syngenta
Unilever Bestfoods
"Soil
& Health challenges NZFSA and the New Zealand Nutrition Foundation to a public
debate on the issue. Overwhelming evidence of corruption of the US Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) when it approved aspartame for the food chain, and the well
documented deceit by then aspartame manufacturer, drug company G.D. Searle, is
at odds with significant independent research showing serious health risks from
aspartame use, and a public forum is warranted."
"It
is dismaying that organisations that should have the publics trust, are, despite
what they say, not actually assessing the weight of sound, scientific evidence
that surrounds aspartame," said Browning. "Does the Deputy Chief Executive
of NZFSA want the agony suffered by many New Zealanders from this poison to reach
even greater proportions?
The protection of food industry aspartame pedlars
makes the NZFSA and New Zealand Nutrition Foundation culpable for the harm that
aspartame sufferers endure here."
"Thanks
to the research and the support of visiting international anti-aspartame expert
Betty Martini, Soil & Health has further significant evidence to support its
call for a ban on aspartame in New Zealand."
"NZFSA
refused to meet with Betty Martini, yet following publicity of Wellington woman
Abby Cormack's aspartame poisoning symptoms, and the information provided through
public meetings and the media by Betty Martini, people already have benefited
significantly by removing aspartame from their lives."
"In
the very first instance NZFSA and school boards should be removing aspartame from
schools, as is happening in other parts of the world where the harm of aspartame
is recognised. The majority of health professionals do not recommend the taking
of aspartame when they become aware of the recognizable symptoms in affected patients."
Soil
& Health is grateful for the knowledge and enthusiasm that Betty Martini has
contributed.
ends