
© AP/Francois Mori
French Attac activists spray-paint the Paris headquarters of Bayer AG to protest its production of environmentally harmful pesticides in Paris, March 14, 2019.
France's personal data protection agency on Wednesday fined US firm Monsanto for illegally compiling files of public figures, journalists and activists with the aim of swaying opinion towards support for its controversial pesticides.
The firm, now owned by German chemical giant Bayer,
failed to inform the people on the watch lists compiled in the context of a heated public debate about glyphosate, a weed killer, it ruled. The CNIL agency fined Monsanto 400,000 euros ($473,000) in the case brought by seven plaintiffs. Compiling lists of contacts was not in itself illegal, the agency said,
but only people who could "reasonably expect" to figure on such lists because of their business sector or their public standing should have been included.
Furthermore,
data had to be collected legally and targets informed, including of their right to refuse being listed. By keeping the lists secret, Monsanto deprived them of this right, CNIL said.
Monsanto gave a rating of one to five to each of the over 200 people on its French lists corresponding to their estimated influence, credibility and level of support for Monsanto on several topics, especially pesticides and genetically-modified crops.
The case, first reported by French media
Le Monde and France 2 television in 2019, quickly spread to
other European countries where Monsanto was also keeping lists.
Comment: Today's war on health has many diabolical facets. Monsanto and its poisons are just one more long-running example that a human life is not worth consideration when Big Agra calls the shots.
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