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To: TheSlowLane who wrote (1704)3/18/1999 5:04:00 PM
From: Anthony Wong  Respond to of 2539
 
BBC: UK - A plate full of trouble
Thursday, March 18, 1999 Published at 14:54 GMT

Restaurants of all types will be hit by the new legislation

Strict new regulations over the labelling of
genetically-modified (GM) foods may be good news for
some consumers but for many in the catering industry
they leave a bitter taste.

The new rules will apply to the entire
food industry. Restaurants, shops,
food manufacturers, catering
companies - even hot dog stands -
will have to conform.

Government ministers say
the new regulations will
address consumer concerns
about GM products and give
them real choice.

Most UK supermarkets
already practice a GM
labelling policy. Many
restaurants, however, are
reluctant to do so saying the
so-called choice it gives
customers is only an illusion.

"All people really want to know when
they go out to eat is whether their
food is safe. They do not want to have
to make a choice between safe and
unsafe," says the president of the
Restaurateurs Association Mike Gottlieb.

"You also have to remember that our suppliers are not
obliged to tell us whether their food contains GM
ingredients or not," he added.

Some of his colleagues in the trade also object to the
extra work created by having to inform customers about
GM ingredients. There are the legal implications to
consider if they get their labelling wrong too.

But safety concerns have led some restaurants to ban
GM foods altogether.

Celebrity chef Antony Worrall
Thompson campaigns
against the use of GM
ingredients and has banned
them from his restaurant
Wiz.

He thinks the rest of the food
industry should follow suit.

"We are a generation away
from knowing the effects of
these products and until then
I would urge the rest of the
trade to ban them too," he
says.

Many diners in London agree. "I think smart restaurants
will now announce themselves as GM free which will be
a selling point," says one diner.

"Labelling GM foods on the menu could take the
romance out of eating out. But in the long run I would
welcome the move," was the view of another.

But for some, the legislation
makes no difference. Eddie
Brockley runs a transport
café in Wigan.

The portions are big, the
menu is simple and GM
foods are not an issue.

"The transport drivers that I
get in here like to see a plate
of food in front of them which
is tasty and does not cost a
lot. They are not bothered if it
is genetically modified or not,
" he said.

news.bbc.co.uk