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  China reviews tougher laws amid milk scandal
Last updated: 2008-10-23


China reviews tougher laws amid milk scandal
2008-10-23

Category
United Nations
Event
2008 China Milk Scandal
Source
(Reuters)

BEIJING (Reuters) - China began reviewing a tougher draft food safety law on Thursday following criticism from the United Nations over its sluggish response to a spreading tainted milk scandal that made thousands of children ill.

China approved in principle a new food safety law last October following a raft of scandals involving unsafe toothpaste, seafood and pet food, among other products.

The country has since seen four children die and thousands of others made ill from drinking milk formula adulterated with melamine, which was subsequently found in other drinks and foods, prompting Chinese-made products to be stripped from shelves worldwide.

More than 3,000 children remain in hospital in China.

A new draft tabled to lawmakers on Thursday had added a provision scrapping a controversial system allowing local food watchdog agencies to grant exemptions to food producers for government quality inspections, Xinhua news agency said.

Sanlu Group, the company at the heart of the tainted formula scandal, and other Chinese companies later found to have produced melamine-tainted milk products had enjoyed the exemptions before the scandal broke last month.

The new draft also compels local governments to issue recall orders to companies that do not proactively pull problem products from the market, and strengthens provisions "to prevent the improper use and misuse of food additives," the agency said.

On Wednesday, the World Health Organization's food safety chief Jorgen Schlundt described China's food safety system as "disjointed" and said poor communications between dispersed ministries and agencies may have prolonged the outbreak of melamine poisoning.

China sacked officials in Shijiazhuang, home to Sanlu, for sitting on a report from the company about the melamine problem for more than a month, while Beijing hosted the Olympics in August.

China has tried to repair confidence in its dairy products, inviting journalists to milk stations and conducting regular tests for melamine, but rarely a day goes by without a new recall of Chinese-made food products announced by a foreign watchdog.

South Korean authorities on Wednesday ordered 23 tonnes of Chinese processed egg products to be destroyed after they were found to be tainted with melamine.

(Reporting by Ian Ransom; Editing by Nick Macfie)

 2008 China Milk Scandal  
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  2 condemned to death for role in China milk crisis (2009-01-22)
  China sentences two to death over tainted milk (2009-01-22)
  China plans production controls for deadly melamine (2009-01-09)
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  China dairy boss delayed reporting quality issues (2009-01-01)
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  Chinese dairies to compensate melamine victims (2008-12-27)
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  Chinese tainted milk company declared bankrupt: Fonterra (2008-12-23)
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  Calls for national infant formula recall spread (2008-11-28)
  Deaths uncounted in China's tainted milk scandal (2008-11-15)
  Now China points finger at foreign milk products (2008-11-07)
  Eggs recalled, exports halted as China's food crisis worsens (2008-10-29)
  China: 3,600 babies still in hospital from tainted milk (2008-10-23)
  China arrests 6 for role in contaminating milk (2008-10-23)
  China reviews tougher laws amid milk scandal (2008-10-23)
  Australia recalls products in tainted milk scandal (2008-10-20)
  China reassures Taiwan consumers on milk safety (2008-10-15)
  China says 5,824 children in hospital after milk scandal (2008-10-15)
  China broadens dairy product recall amid health scandal (2008-10-15)
  China orders more testing for liquid milk, powder (2008-10-14)
  China dairy sued over infant's toxic milk death (2008-10-13)


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