China moves on food safety as EU raises questions

By Staff
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Google Oneindia News

BEIJING, May 23 (Reuters) China announced plans to strengthen domestic food safety, while a European Union official said Beijing faces a global challenge to maintain confidence in its products following a series of health scares.

China's State Food and Drug Administration would take seven steps to enhance food safety, including expanded inspections and monitoring, and keeping files on the reliability of companies, with a ''blacklist'' of violators, the agency announced on its Web site (www.sfda.gov.cn) yesterday.

''There will be incentives for excellence and punishment for the substandard, and those that seriously violate trust will be resolutely thrown out and rejected,'' it said.

Officials would also strengthen emergency plans. ''When a major food safety incident occurs, reporting must be swift, the response rapid, and controls vigorous,'' the agency said.

The announcement came after growing worry about Chinese food and other products tainted with toxins, fake ingredients, and diseases -- a concern that has rippled across the globe following exposure of dangerous medical and food ingredients reaching foreign markets.

In April, China's President Hu Jintao held a meeting of central leaders to address food safety.

The European Commission's Director General for Health and Consumer Protection, Robert Madelin, said yesterday China needed to be more candid to sustain confidence in its exports.

''The challenge for China is to maintain global confidence in its products, and the way to do that is for the regulatory authorities to be very open and very cooperative,'' he told a news conference in Beijing.

''(This) is exactly what we have been suggesting in areas like GM, to share samples, so that the enforcers in Europe feel like we're getting good cooperation,'' Madelin added, referring to genetically modified products.

China should provide more samples of bird flu viruses found in the country as well as samples of genetically modified produce to better help the bloc protect its own citizens, said Madelin.

In the most recent scandal, US consumers have been alarmed by a spate of pet deaths blamed on tainted wheat gluten and rice protein exported from China, as well as reports of toxins and disease in other Chinese exports.

A Chinese-made medicine ingredient also killed at least 100 people in Panama, according to a report in the New York Times.

China's Foreign Ministry repeated the government's line that the country takes food and drug safety seriously.

''In recent years, the government has done a fair bit of work on this, and has gradually set up a comprehensive legal system,'' spokeswoman Jiang Yu told a regular news conference, adding investigations were continuing into ''some cases''.

Madelin said China was still holding back on sharing bird flu samples.

''We need samples because flu viruses evolve very quickly and our laboratory needs to have DNA finger-printing of different samples so that if, in the future, a wild swan comes from somewhere in China to somewhere in Europe and it dies of flu, we can tell from the DNA that that's where it came from,'' Madelin said.

BACKYARD BIRDS China has millions of backyard birds and a strained rural medical system that is seen as key in the fight against bird flu.

The government on Saturday confirmed the latest outbreak of the H5N1 bird flu virus among poultry in the central province of Hunan, but no cases of human infection have been reported in the area.

Chinese pig farmers are grappling as well with an outbreak of blue ear disease, or Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome, which industry sources say has wiped out as many as a million pigs and sent domestic pork prices soaring.

The EU would also like more samples of Chinese-grown genetically modified rice, Madelin said.

European and Chinese officials have been negotiating rules to test for ingredients processed from genetically modified rice or other cereals in Chinese exports, though the rules have not been finalised.

''Chinese officials feel that they have too little rice to send a few kilograms to Europe, but we have asked them to grow some more,'' Madelin said.

No transgenic rice is allowed to be grown, sold or marketed in the EU, where consumers have a reputation for mistrusting genetically modified food.

However, last year two environmental groups said samples from three EU member states included a biotech strain in products made with rice grown in China.

China has not approved commercial growing of GM rice but some environmental groups have said it has already made its way into the food chain.

REUTERS RC VV0939

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