GPS News  
FARM NEWS
China food scandals spark new safety fears

by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) April 28, 2011
A wave of tainted-food scares has renewed fears in China over continued product-safety problems despite a government promise to clean up the food industry following a deadly 2008 milk scandal.

Tainted pork, toxic milk, dyed buns and other dodgy foods have surfaced in recent weeks, sickening consumers and highlighting the government's apparent inability to oversee China's huge and under-regulated food industry.

The litany of stomach-turning headlines has caused officials to scramble to contain the damage and sparked an anguished lament last week from Premier Wen Jiabao about unscrupulous food producers.

"These virulent food-safety incidents have revealed a grave situation of dishonesty and moral degradation," Wen Jiabao said in a speech to government officials.

"Without high-quality citizens or ethical strength, China cannot be a respectable economy or power in a real sense," he said in published remarks.

Recent scandals have included pork found on the market so loaded with bacteria that it glowed in the dark, according to a state press report.

Authorities have discovered bean sprouts laced with cancer-causing nitrates, steamed buns with banned chemical preservatives, and rice laced with heavy metals, to name just a few.

China pledged to clean up the food industry after milk products tainted with the industrial chemical melamine -- added to give the appearance of high protein content -- killed at least six babies and sickened 300,000 others in 2008.

With food safety regularly ranked as a top public concern, China also passed a 2009 Food Safety Law amid much fanfare.

But the recent scandals prompted the health ministry on Monday to launch a crackdown on 151 banned food additives, while the central government vowed to issue new food safety rules this year -- an apparent admission that the Food Safety Law and other measures had failed.

"The causes of food safety problems in China are many," Bao Chengsheng, a professor at the Shanghai University of Political Science and Law told AFP.

"One aspect is that China's legal system is incomplete. A lot of regulations are unclear... causing legal loopholes."

He added that underfunded regulators struggle to keep tabs on China's countless small food producers and retailers, setting the stage for lax oversight and corruption.

For example, "pig brokers" often bribe food safety inspectors to turn a blind eye to tainted meat, the state-controlled Global Times said.

Such practices have fueled a market for the carcasses of pigs that have died from disease and whose meat should be destroyed but instead finds its way into the food chain, the paper said.

Tainted meat from the carcasses of between 20 to 30 million diseased pigs enters Chinese markets each year, it said, citing experts.

Culpable officials typically receive slap-on-the-wrist administrative penalties," it quoted Sang Liwei, a lawyer who helped draft the Food Safety Law, as saying.

"That is not enough. Their criminal liabilities should be investigated too," he said.

Ninety-one villagers in central China's Hunan province were hospitalised last weekend with food poisoning after eating pork believed to have been tainted with clenbuterol, an additive that makes meat leaner, reports said.

A total of 286 villagers had to seek treatment.

Despite declaring that all melamine-laced dairy products had been confiscated or destroyed, they have repeatedly surfaced on the market.

In the latest discovery, authorities in Chongqing city in China's southwest confiscated 26 tonnes of melamine-tainted milk powder, the Global Times said.

The scandals have left beleaguered consumers not knowing whom to trust, Beijing office worker Zhang Lihua said.

"If the police don't crack down on profit-driven businessmen who have lost their morality, they will become even bolder and produce even more poisonous food," she told AFP.

"It has become so bad that no one knows what foods are safe and which ones are poisonous."



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Farming Today - Suppliers and Technology



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


FARM NEWS
Stressed out crop impede higher agriculture yields
Ames IA (SPX) Apr 28, 2011
Like people, plants experience stress. And also, like people, the response to that stress can determine success. People can exercise, or rest, or talk about the problem. For plants, ways to deal with stress are internal. And ISU researchers are trying to understand how they do it. Stephen Howell is a professor of genetics, development and cell biology and former director of the ... read more







FARM NEWS
China food scandals spark new safety fears

Lima to declare itself a GMO-free zone

Scorpion venom bad for bugs but good for pesticides

Stressed out crop impede higher agriculture yields

FARM NEWS
China's Huawei sues ZTE for patent infringement

Zeroing in on the Elusive Green LED

Conducting ferroelectrics may be key to new electronic memory

LED efficiency puzzle solved

FARM NEWS
Brazil's key airports set to go private

Extreme testing for rotor blades

ANA returns to profit, faces uncertain outlook

DLR measures the shape of a barn owl wing in flight

FARM NEWS
Luxury cars and trucks boost Daimler's profit

Japan quake impact weighs on Honda, Mazda

Mayor Villaraigosa Announces Electric Vehicle Pilot Program

Volvo net profit more than doubles on strong sales

FARM NEWS
First offshore yuan IPO set for Hong Kong debut

Venezuela industry not keen on Mercosur

First offshore yuan IPO makes limp Hong Kong debut

China's Wen woos Indonesia with song, loans

FARM NEWS
Era of canopy crane ending

Chile invests in Uruguay's new pulp mill

'Cedar mafia' threatens Morocco's cherished wood

WWF warns of massive forest loss

FARM NEWS
NASA Mission Seeks to Uncover a Rainfall Mystery

Satellite tracking of sea turtles reveals potential threat posed by manmade chemicals

GOES-13 Satellite Eyeing System With High Risk of Severe Weather

Running ring around hurricanes predictions

FARM NEWS
2 graphene layers may be better than 1

Diamonds shine in quantum networks

Climate Change From Black Carbon Depends On Altitude

New Fracture Resistance Mechanisms Provided By Graphene


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement