"The question is how to avoid using LDCs (less-developed countries) as guinea
pigs for genetically-modified products," Hassan Khedr, Egypt's minister of supply
and internal trade, told delegates to an International Grains Council conference.Egypt is the world's second-largest grain importing country, Khedr said.
He said consumers in wealthier countries could afford to choose whether to buy GM
products, made from plants altered genetically to grow better or resist
herbicides, for example.
GM foods have stirred controversy in many countries and especially in Europe,
where consumers have resisted buying them for fear they may cause health
problems.
The IGC estimated Egyptian total wheat imports at 6.7 million tonnes in 2000/01.