Snacks pulled off shelves

Written by changthai11 on Friday, September 26th, 2008

Snacks pulled off shelves

FDA testing for Chinese toxic

The has asked distributors to temporarily remove six products - biscuits and snacks - from their shelves for fear they contain contaminated Chinese milk.

From today, Oreo sticks, Dove bars, M&M , Snickers peanut bars and , Mentos yoghurt candies, and Mao Huad coffee and crackers should not be sold in stores.

Deputy Public Wicharn Meenchainant said the FDA initially wanted sales of the products suspended for a week or two so could be run on them.

Mr Wicharn yesterday met importers, producers, distributors, , retail and operators and asked for their cooperation.

But he said any who refuse would not be seen as and would not be punished.

He called on small stores to cooperate as well and said consumers who see these items on sale should call the FDA hotline: 1556.

The list is based on the FDA’s registration of distributed and imported products which contain Chinese milk or as an ingredient.

Unscrupulous in China added the cheap, toxic industrial chemical melamine - used in pesticides and plastic-making - to substandard milk to inflate the nitrogen count, which is used to determine .

Their actions have sparked global alarm. More than 54,000 children have been reported sick from tainted in China and nearly 13,000 infants admitted to hospital with kidney illnesses, 104 in a serious condition with and agonising complications. Five Hong Kong children also have after drinking formula from China.

Many countries have banned from China and many more have placed restrictions on them.

FDA secretary-general Chatree Bancheun said melamine in low concentrations would not cause mutations, only urinary tract irritation. Infants can safely consume 19-20mg of melamine per kilogramme of daily food intake.

“However, for parents’ peace of mind, babies should be breast-fed. Mother’s milk is far better for infants’ development than powdered or other instant milk.”

In Hat Yai, vendors at the popular Kimyong, Santisuk, Pangthong and Plaza markets quickly pulled all Chinese dairy products from their displays.

Livestock Development Department chief Sakchai Sriboonseu has ordered strict checks for melamine in livestock products and animal feed materials.

On Wednesday, the FDA banned White Rabbit candies from China, for fear the edible inner wrapping may contain melamine.

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This entry was posted on Friday, September 26th, 2008 and is filed under General 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.

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