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U.S.
Officials Seize Group's Shipment of Cuban
Pesticide
Authorities
dispute claims by Pastors for Peace that it
had declared the rat poison at Texas
crossing and contend that the product poses
a 'safety hazard.'
MARK
FINEMAN TIMES STAFF WRITER, July
13 2001
MEXICO
CITY -- U.S. Customs Service agents Thursday
night seized three containers from a New
York-based humanitarian aid group, hours
after the activists claimed to have brought
more than 30 pounds of a Cuban-made rat
poison across America's southern border
unchallenged.
Customs
officials in Washington said that the
material was detained at a U.S. Border
Patrol checkpoint well inside Texas and that
the agency was investigating whether the
Pastors for Peace violated anti-smuggling
and public health laws by failing to declare
the pesticide at the border crossing.
Citing
public safety rather than politics, customs
officials had vowed to seize the shipment of
the rodenticide Biorat and to block the
group's effort to break a U.S. economic
embargo by importing unlicensed goods from
Communist-run Cuba. But moments after his
convoy crossed into McAllen, Texas, on
Thursday morning, the Rev. Lucius Walker Jr.
insisted in a telephone interview that he
and his group told U.S. Customs agents they
had the rat poison and that the agents
neither searched for nor seized it.
"When
they asked if we had anything to declare,
someone on the bus shouted, 'Biorat!' "
said the Brooklyn preacher, who had
announced his plans to bring the product to
the U.S. last week. "They didn't seize
anything. They didn't examine anything. I'm
trying to figure it out myself."
"That
is absolutely false," said Dean Boyd,
spokesman for the U.S. Customs Service in
Washington.
"We
had negative declarations from each of the
individuals in the group and the reverend
himself," he said. "Our people
asked every single individual, including Mr.
Walker, if they had anything to declare, and
they were emphatic in stating they had
nothing."
Boyd
said that the case has been turned over to
customs investigators, adding that border
agents had, in fact, X-rayed the vehicles in
the activists' convoy and found nothing
unusual.
"If,
in fact, Biorat was imported across the
border," he said, "it would
constitute possible smuggling violations,
false declarations and violations of
Environmental Protection Agency
regulations."
On
Wednesday, Boyd said the agency's plan to
seize the rat poison had nothing to do with
Bush administration policies toward Cuba.
Biorat, he said flatly, is banned under U.S.
health and environmental regulations.
"This
is not a Cuba issue. It's a public health
issue," Boyd said. "Biorat is not
admissible into the United States. It poses
a public safety hazard, according to the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control [and
Prevention]."
Walker's
group successfully challenged the
4-decade-old embargo from the north at the
same border crossing in Texas last week,
bringing about 80 tons of unlicensed
humanitarian aid to Cuba--his 12th such
shipment.
From
Havana, he openly challenged U.S. officials
to block the shipment of Biorat, asserting
that the move would "show the true
colors" of President Bush's Cuba
policy, which many analysts expect will be
more strident than that of the Clinton
administration. His group's Web site
announced the date and time his party would
be crossing into McAllen.
Backed
by the claims of the Cuban scientists who
developed Biorat and the Cuban company that
has marketed it to countries throughout
Latin America, Asia and Africa since 1994,
the pastor insisted that the product had
been proved safe for humans and deadly for
rats.
But
this week, customs officials in Washington
produced letters, documents and other
research suggesting that Biorat is not safe
for humans.
A
1998 letter from the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention in Atlanta stated
that Biorat "poses a public health risk
worldwide, yet continues to be
marketed." A 1996 article in the
British medical journal Lancet asserted that
the product "could easily cause
food-borne disease in people."
The
bottom line, customs officials said, was an
Environmental Protection Agency statement
this week: "Biorat is not registered
for use in the U.S. . . . It is not
permitted to be imported into the U.S."
Such
criticism is not new to Biorat's scientists
and salespeople in Havana. They call it a
disinformation campaign engineered by the
U.S. government, which Cuba asserts has
waged economic war against the island since
President Fidel Castro's revolution in 1959.
During
the morning telephone interview from the
U.S.-Mexican border, Walker said his group
still planned to distribute the rat killer
as humanitarian aid to community groups in
city neighborhoods where rat infestations
are blamed for debilitating diseases.
But
customs officials said Thursday night that
EPA examiners would determine whether the
containers actually hold Biorat. "We
have no idea whether this is, in fact,
Biorat. It could be a box of oatmeal,"
Boyd said. "We won't know until we test
it."
Copyright
2001, Los Angeles Times
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