Greenpeace, the global environmental NGO, typically leads protests. Last month, it became the target.
Patrick Moore, a spokesperson for the protesters — and himself an early Greenpeace member — accused the organization of complicity in the deaths of 2 million children per year. He was referring to deaths resulting from vitamin A deficiency, which is common among children for whom rice is the staple food.
These deaths could be prevented, Moore claims, by the use of "golden rice," a form of the grain that has been genetically modified to have a higher beta carotene content than ordinary rice. Greenpeace, along with other organizations opposed to the use of genetically modified organisms (GMOs), has campaigned against the introduction of beta carotene, which is converted in the human body into vitamin A.
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