BEIJING, Aug. 3 (Xinhua) -- China's top quality
control agency on Friday banned imports of aquatic products from Indonesia,
claiming many were found containing toxic substances and disease causing
pathogens.
Quarantine officials had found Indonesian aquatic
products tainted with mercury, chromium, the antibacterial drug nitrofural, and
pathogens, the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and
Quarantine (GAQSIQ) said.
The agency stated in a circular the tainted aquatic
products have been returned or destroyed.
In the first six months, Chinese officials seized 121
batches of Indonesian foods ranging from aquatic products, palm oil, canned food
to biscuits that contain excessive drug residues and food additives and harmful
organisms, according to the AQSIO.
It cited examples, saying quarantine officials in the
southern province of Guangdong had detected salmonella in frozen sea eels and
listeria monocytogenes in frozen fish offal, while officials in the eastern city
of Ningbo found forbidden citrine pigment in canned pineapples.
The GAQSIQ said local quarantine officials had
returned or destroyed all the tainted products, without providing details of the
brands and quantities of the goods and their producers.
It urged local authorities to step up quality
inspections of Indonesian food imports and urged domestic importers to specify
clearly food safety requirements with Indonesian exporters to reduce trade
risks.