BEIJING, Aug. 2 (Xinhua) -- A senior Chinese official
has lambasted foreign media for fabricating scares over Chinese food products.
Some foreign media had viciously sensationalized
product quality problems and food scares concerning a small number of Chinese
goods or companies, said Vice Commerce Minister Gao Hucheng.
Some media fabricated safety problems in campaigns to
block imports of Chinese goods, which he described as de facto trade
protectionism, he said.
Gao said some foreign media reports told of Chinese
boys as young as six growing moustaches and girls aged seven growing breasts
after eating hormone-tainted food.
He also said some media had branded China-made
products "killers".
"We welcome impartial media reports as they will help
us seek truth from the facts and take appropriate measures to rectify problems.
"Like other governments around the world, the Chinese
government pays great attention to safety and when problems occur, we never
shirk, but deal with them responsibly after finding the facts," Gao said.
The government has long been cracking down on fake,
low-quality and unsafe products, but it was almost impossible to eradicate them
as a small minority of local companies lacked social responsibility.
The government had taken measures to tackle product
safety problems, including blacklisting firms that exported unsafe products, he
said.
In July, the government revoked the business licenses
of Xuzhou Anying Biotechnology Development Company, in eastern Jiangsu province,
and Binzhou Futian Biotechnology Co., Ltd., in neighboring Shandong province,
for exporting melamine-tainted wheat protein that ended up in pet food in the
U.S.
Gao said the quality of Chinese products was
improving steadily. A survey showed that 94 percent of Chinese vegetables were
up to standard in terms of pesticide residue in the first half, 12 percentage
points higher than in 2003.
Commerce Minister Bo Xilai said in a statement posted
on the website of the Ministry of Commerce that more than 90 percent of Chinese
imported products were good and safe.
Bo hoped all the parties could treat China-made
products objectively, fairly and rationally and would not let problems affect
normal trade.
The Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare in Japan,
China's biggest food importer, said in July that 99.42 percent of the imported
food from China in 2006 met safety standards, trailing 99.38 percent of the
European Union and 98.69 percent of the U.S..