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By Gillian Wong
China to inspect from
farm to dinner table
||| The head
of China’s quality watchdog said the country was
stepping up checks on its exports to ensure they
conformed to the food safety standards of recipient
countries.
China vowed Monday to
inspect every link from farm to dinner table in an
overhaul of the dairy industry that it called "chaotic"
and acknowledged it had suffered from a lack of
oversight.
As part of China's ongoing effort to restore public
trust in its food products, police detained six people
for allegedly tampering with milk in northern China, a
spokeswoman said, bringing to 32 the number of people
arrested in connection with the scandal.
At a meeting of the State Council, or cabinet, the
government said it would punish companies and officials
involved in the contamination of milk products – a
practice that has been blamed for killing four babies
and sickening more than 54,000 children with kidney
stones and other illnesses in China.
"The milk product safety incident caused great harm to
the health and lives of babies, and also brought a very
bad influence over the dairy and food industries," a
notice about the meeting on the government's Web site
said.
Monday's meeting, chaired by Premier Wen Jiabao, is the
latest move by the Chinese government, which is
scrambling to show it is tackling the widespread
contamination of milk powder and other milk products by
the industrial chemical melamine.
The tainted milk exposed "that China's dairy production
and circulation has been chaotic and supervision has
been gravely absent," the notice said. Unlawful "elements"
and companies had also put profit above people's lives,
it said.
China has struggled to contain public dismay and growing
international concern over the latest scandal,
castigating local officials for negligence and making ar-rests
while promising to raise product safety standards.
But the scandal has continued to lead to recalls and the
blocking of Chinese imports in numerous countries.
Iran's Health Ministry, for instance, was quoted on
state radio Sunday as saying it would ban the import of
all Chinese dairy products until further notice.
The six arrested Monday for tampering with milk were
being questioned in Hohhot, in northern China's Inner
Mongolia region, a city spokeswoman said, refusing to
give her name as is common with Chinese bureaucrats. She
declined to say when the detentions took place or give
other details.
The arrests followed an investigation into two major
Chinese milk companies based in Inner Mongolia, Xinhua
said.
The head of China's quality watchdog said the country
was stepping up checks on its exports to ensure they
conformed to the food safety standards of recipient
countries, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.
"Food safety concerns not only the health of the public,
but also the life of business," Xinhua quoted Wang Yong,
the director of the General Administration of Quality
Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine, the agency
responsible for ensuring that China's food supply chain
is safe.
Wang replaced Li Changjiang, who resigned last month in
the wake of the scandal. Wang vowed to make "a
substantial change in the production and distribution of
dairy products."
Part of the agency's cleanup effort was the deployment
in mid-September of more than 5,000 inspectors to check
dairy factories. Wang said the inspections covered all
dairy producers across the country to monitor the entire
production process around the clock.
Chinese authorities believe suppliers trying to boost
output diluted their milk, then added melamine because
its high nitrogen content can fool tests measuring
protein content.
Wang's watchdog agency said Sunday that tests showed
that no melamine has been found in milk powder produced
after Sept. 14, three days after a major dairy at the
heart of the scandal recalled 700 tons of baby milk
formula.
But the effects of the contamination continued to be
felt as 382 more children last week received treatment
in Beijing's hospitals for kidney stones, according to
the Beijing News, a state-run newspaper.
More than 3,000 children have been treated for kidney
stones in Beijing since the scandal broke in early
September, the paper said. Calls to the Health Ministry
rang unanswered Mon-day.
Also Monday, Japan ordered the country's farm
cooperatives and other industrial groups to in-crease
inspections of animal feed and pet food imported from
China to make sure they don't contain melamine,
Agriculture Ministry official Satoshi Moto-mura said.
The order comes days after Beijing said several Chinese
feed makers allegedly mixed mela-mine into their
products used for dairy cows. Motomura added, however,
that the ministry has so far received no reports of
mela-mine contamination.
On Sunday, health officials in Hong Kong found high
levels of melamine in chocolate produced in China by
British candy maker Cadbury.
Hong Kong officials said they found melamine in samples
of two chocolate products made by Cadbury at its Beijing
factory. The chocolates are among 11 Chinese-made
products already recalled by the company throughout the
Asian and Pacific regions. |||
Gillian Wong is an Associated Press Writer. Fellow
Associated Press Writer Dikky Sinn in Hong Kong
contributed to this article.
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