Cross-Straits talks to cover food safety

Written by changthai11 on Thursday, October 9th, 2008

Cross-Straits talks to cover food safety

By (China Daily)

Food safety has been put high on the agenda of the second round of talks between the mainland’s Association for Relations Across the () and Taiwan’s Straits (SEF) scheduled for late October, following contaminated from the mainland being found on sale in Taiwan, a Taiwan said Wednesday.

Twenty-five tons of sold by Hebei province-based Sanlu Group to Taiwan in June were found contaminated with melamine, State Council spokesman Li Weiyi said at a press conference.

Since Sept 12, Sanlu has recalled all of its products found to contain melamine, a chemical that makes milk appear rich in protein and that led to infants who took Sanlu’s to develop .

Tainted has claimed the lives of at least four infants and left about 53,000 others suffering from various .

“The of the State Council informed the immediately after the of , Inspection and Quarantine reported the case, and has ordered Sanlu to ask their Taiwan partners to stop selling the contaminated ,” Li said.

“We have also informed about the other 21 mainland whose products were found contaminated with melamine,” Li said. Those companies have not sold products to Taiwan.

“We feel deeply sorry for the trouble Sanlu infant formula might have brought to ,” Li said.

Li said the tainted were a major food , and both the mainland and were making efforts to minimize its negative impact on cross-Straits relations.

“We are cooperating with the SEF and to find where the tainted milk was sold and to make a thorough investigation into the whole incident,” he said.

He said that who were affected by the tainted Sanlu products can seek compensation through the SEF and the . The mainland authorities will organize expert committees to deal with those cases.

Asked about the possible contamination of melamine in artificial coffee creamer products sold to Taiwan, Li said that there was no evidence of such cases so far.

He said the Shandong provincial quality inspection bureau had checked the creamer produced by Qingdao-based Shandong Duqing Company, which was reported by a number of Taiwan media organizations as selling tainted products to Taiwan, and did not find evidence of melamine contamination.

Taiwanese government official Liu Chao-shiuan said on Tuesday that Taiwan intends to send a team of experts to the mainland to gather information on the tainted milk scandal.

News Topics Related Posts :

News Topics : , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

This entry was posted on Thursday, October 9th, 2008 and is filed under Taiwan News. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Asia News Reports

News Headlines

Advertisement

Bookmarks Me

del.icio.us Digg Furl Reddit Ask BlinkList Bloglines blogmarks BUMPzee Blogg-Buzz DZone Facebook Google Ma.gnolia Mixx MisterWong muti Newsvine PlugIM ppnow Propeller Rojo Shadows Simpy Slashdot Socializer Sphere Sphinn Spurl StumbleUpon Tailrank Technorati ThisNext Twitter Windows Live Wists YahooMyWeb

Thailand News Update

Asia News Update

World News Update