Syrian Lab Found Wheat Seeds Offered By U.S. Contain Harmful Worm Infection

Wheat

DAMASCUS, Dec 4 (NNN-SANA) – Syrian agriculture officials and farmers, have been complaining that the wheat seeds, recently provided by the United States for farmers, in Syria’s north-eastern province of al-Hasakah, contain a high degree of nematode (plant-parasitic worm) infection, that would harm the soil.

In the laboratory examination that used saline solution, researchers found a number of grains are infected with wheat allele, which is a nematode infection, Jamal Abdullah, head of the examination committee in the laboratory of the agricultural faculty in al-Hasakah, said.

He also mentioned that in the visual examination of the sample, there were broken grains and some strange dark galls.

To confirm the results, “we put the sample under the microscope. We noticed the presence of larva. Its length was about two millimetres,” said the official.

Saeed Jaji, director of Agriculture and Agrarian Reform in al-Hasakah, said that, the results of the seeds’ tests were “catastrophic,” stressing that, large quantities of nematode seeds were found. He warned that an epidemic would happen, if the seeds were planted.

“The engineers started examining the samples, and the result was catastrophic. The samples examined were one kilogram, and they contained 30 to 34 nematode seeds,” he said, adding that, once the seeds are planted, an epidemic will happen.

The laboratory analysis by the country’s agriculture ministry also confirmed the invalidity of the wheat seeds provided by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) to Syrian farmers, according to a recent report.

The ministry found that the seeds are not suitable for cultivation, due to a high rate of 40 percent of nematodes, which will pose a great threat to the region’s soil and agriculture.

The offering of the invalid wheat seeds has been widely regarded as a U.S. misconduct in Syria. Jaji pointed out that, such a move by the United States is a continuation of its sanction-featured policy to contain Syria.

Since 2014, the United States has been wrecking havoc in the country, through shelling, airstrikes, and political manipulation. It has also greatly undermined the Syrian economy by seizing control of the country’s gas and oil fields, and imposing suffocating sanctions that impaired the Syrian people’s livelihood.

Farmers in the countryside of al-Qamishli and the rest of the region have been warned against the seeds, which, once planted, will incur pests that jeopardise any plantation in the lands.

Local farmers were also skeptical about the seeds.

Ali al-Mohammad, a farmer from al-Hasakah, said, the insects within the seeds would ruin the land for six years. He added that the United States has destructed his country.

Giving Syria contaminated seeds can be viewed as “an American occupation,” added the farmer.

Aboud al-Mohammad, another farmer, said that, the farmers in al-Hasakah can never trust the seeds offered by the U.S. forces there, stressing that farmers want Syrian seeds.

“We were offered the American seeds, but we didn’t accept it. The American occupation destroyed all the people. (They) burned crops, stole crops. We do not trust the American seeds. We want Syrian seeds,” he said.

Mahmoud al-Hassan, also a farmer in al-Hasakah, said that, the United States has ruined people’s life in Syria, which could have been much better without the U.S. presence.

“It was America that destroyed us. Had it not been America, we would have lived in prosperity. America entered and destroyed us. (We have) No fuel, no services, no bread,” he said.

In response to the news of contaminated U.S. seeds, USAID said in a statement to Voice of America that, the wheat seeds had gone through treatment and testing for safety and quality before they were donated.

“USAID is supplying Adana and Cihan wheat seed varieties to Syrian farmers, which are sourced from the region and undergo a series of tests, at a qualified lab in (the) Kurdish Region of Iraq, to verify their quality before they are transported and distributed to farmers in north-east Syria,” said a USAID spokesperson in the statement.