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A Chinese artist performs with ceramic
bowls at the ceramics product hall during the 102nd Chinese Export
Commodities Fair (CECF), also known as the Canton Fair, in Guangzhou,
capital of south China's Guangdong Province, Oct. 26, 2007.(Xinhua File
Photo)
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BRUSSELS, Nov. 22 (Xinhua) -- China has made
considerable progress in taking actions to ensure safety of toys and other
products exported to Europe, the European Union (EU) consumer chief said on
Thursday.
An EU overview of China's efforts showed the Chinese authorities have made "a significant effort
with respect to the enforcement actions it took as a follow-up to the RAPEX
notifications of dangerous consumer goods," EU Consumer Protection Commissioner
Meglena Kuneva told reporters.
RAPEX is an EU-wide rapid alert system for non-food
consumer products. Since 2006, the EU has been relaying information to China of
unsafe products of Chinese origin which were reported on the European market
under its RAPEX.
China agreed in July to present a detailed report on
prevention measures and the follow-up to European alerts in October after
Mattel, the world's largest toy maker, made massive recalls of Chinese-made
products for concerns about lead paint and magnets that could be swallowed.
Mattel later said it should take full responsibility
for magnets related recalls due to design problems.
Describing the latest report as "encouraging," Kuneva
said China has fully investigated 184 cases during the three-month period from
July to September, while corrective actions were taken in 43 percent of the
cases.
Among those actions, 93 export bans were put in place
and in 14 cases, supervision was strengthened over the manufacturers.
"I believe that these kinds of outcomes show that our
co-operative approach with the Chinese is one that we can build on," Kuneva
said.
By December, China will put in place a domestic alert
system modeled on the RAPEX system to co-ordinate work with the regions and
increase effective cooperation.
Kuneva said it is another positive signal and the EU
will increase technical support and training to China in the field of product
safety, particularly in relation to the new Chinese domestic alert system.
An EU-China trade project will carry out a study of
product safety control mechanisms in place in China, to identify areas for
further co-operation, she said, adding the product safety issue will be
discussed at the EU-China summit next week.
Kuneva again warned against the use of consumer
safety as a disguise for protectionism, insisting on an open economy for the
benefit of European consumers.
"There is a very thin line between protection and
protectionism. There are some old-world protectionists, who would like to 'hide
behind the skirts' of consumer safety," she said, "Open markets are built on
consumer confidence."
Asked about the possibility of a ban on toy imports
from China she had previously threatened if Beijing failed to address her
concerns, Kuneva said EU efforts were focused on "preventing" such a ban.
In the run up to the Christmas, Kuneva also warned
parents against boycotting products from China, the world's largest toy
manufacturer, which exported 22 billion toys last year, about 60 percent of the
world's total.
"Parents should not avoid buying Chinese toys. They
want good prices, good choice and good services," she said.
Acknowledging there are no 100 percent guarantees in
this world, she advised concerned parents to make their choice based on brands
and labels.