TONY BLAIR has
promised to break down the “anti- science fashion” in Britain,
declaring that the Government will never give way to misguided
protesters who stand in the way of medical and economic advance.
The Prime Minister said in an interview with The Times
that there should be a more mature attitude to science in Britain.
“It is time to speak up for science,” he said in advance of a
substantial speech on the subject on Thursday.
Mr Blair gave warning that research work would be lost to
Britain and Europe and go elsewhere in the world if animal welfare
activists and other protesters were allowed to get away with
stopping projects that could save lives. He called for an end to
the air of suspicion and mistrust that sometimes surrounded the
work of scientists and the misplaced fears and ignorance it often
generated. Mr Blair said there were huge opportunities in science,
for medical progress and for dealing with some of the great
environmental and economic challenges.
His speech, in which he will promise to continue increasing
investment in research and development, has been planned since he
visited high-tech projects in India at the turn of the year.
He said: “I was struck in India by the very close links between
enterprise and science and the fact that the Indians were openly
saying that they felt that some of the anti- science attitudes in
the developed economy were giving them real opportunities they
were determined to exploit.”
Mr Blair said that there were obviously ethical questions over
some research that had to be addressed by politicians and society
as a whole. “But it is completely unacceptable for people to try
to disrupt and destroy the legitimate research on which these
issues will ultimately be judged.”
The Prime Minister is privately furious at the actions of
protesters which have resulted in work being held up on research
into genetically modified foods, and at disruption that could
threaten a neurological research project in Cambridge aimed at
helping sufferers of Alzheimer’s disease. He is angry over the
regular description of GM foods as “Frankenstein foods”, and at
the way science was blamed for the BSE emergency. “BSE was not
caused by bad science but by bad practices,” he said.
“Some of these protests have been completely over the top,” Mr
Blair said. “There are huge challenges and opportunities we have
to face up to. It is time to defend science, to make clear that
the Government is not going to allow misguided protests against
science to get in the way of confronting the challenges of making
the most of our opportunities.”
In his speech on Thursday, Mr Blair will speak of his objective
to persuade more young people to take up mathematics, physics and
engineering at school and university. He will say that scientists
should be applauded and admired and should not have their work
denigrated. He will speak of increasing co-operation between
countries on research, saying that he does not want a “little
Britain approach” to science.
Mark Matfield, director of the Research Defence Society, which
speaks up for scientists involved in animal experiments, said last
night: “We welcome this hugely. Tony Blair has always been very
pro-science and pro-scientist, and we were impressed with the way
he refused to mince words over Huntingdon Life Sciences.
“All our research shows that it does make a very significant
difference to public attitudes when you see political leaders
speak out on these issues.”
Mr Blair was right to say research would go abroad if the
conditions were not right, Dr Matfield said. What was more, many
other countries had less rigorous ethical standards. “Here in
Britain, we manage to combine top quality science with very high
ethical standards, but other countries, the ‘tiger economies’, do
not balance those in the same way we do,” he said. “We walk a very
careful line, and we would not want research to be driven to
places where the standards are not those that we approve of.”
Guy Poppy, of Southampton University, a member of the pro-GM
panel Cropgen, said: “I think most of the public agree with Mr
Blair. They want more information on the GM issue to make up their
minds, and that is not helped when people destroy the trials that
have been set up to determine exactly that. That’s something we
have always thought Tony Blair and other politicians should be
clear about stating, and we’re delighted that he’s doing so.
“I think speaking out like this also means a lot to the
scientists and people involved in the field. They realise there is
a figurehead who is prepared to listen and to support them.”
An exclusive interview with Tony Blair will appear in
The Times tomorrow.
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Five priorities
GM crops: Field trials testing the impact of genetically
modified crops on biodiversity are under way. There will be
pressure from anti-GM campaigners to keep the moratorium on
commercial planting.
Animal rights extremism: The Government has bailed out
Huntingdon Life Sciences but the problem of violent protests
against the use of animals in medical research remains acute.
Cloning and stem cells: Human reproductive cloning is
banned but research into embryonic stem cells is allowed in
Britain. The rules allow more work to be done here than in other
countries; leading scientists are moving here to pursue their
research.
Genetic privacy: Insurance companies are to be allowed
to demand the results of certain genetic tests. Most other
countries have elected to keep these data secret.
Funding: This has improved substantially since 1997 but
many laboratories are dilapidated; universities can rarely compete
with American counterparts when it comes to academic salaries.