by Xinhua writer Wu Qiong
GUANGZHOU, Nov. 30 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Vice Premier
Wu Yi on Friday asked the country's quality watchdogs to beef up quality checks
of food and toy exports ahead of the coming Christmas and New Year holidays.
"We must let no substandard products be exported (for
the holiday season)," Wu said while addressing a work conference for the
country's four-month-long nationwide product quality campaign launched in
August.
"It's a good opportunity for us to re-establish the
positive image of Chinese products by providing safe holiday goods for overseas
customers," Wu told the conference in Guangzhou, the country's manufacturing
hub.
Wu also asked the country's customs offices and
quality and quarantine watchdogs to establish a network for information check-up
by the end of the year in a bid to avoid the evasion of quality checks.
Chinese industries have been battered by a raft of
reports detailing substandard products ranging from drugs to toys.
In the wake of product safety scandals, the Chinese
government responded by introducing a new recall system this summer, embarking
on the four-month nationwide product quality campaign and offered intensive
training courses to domestic toy manufacturers.
Chinese exporters have learned a lesson from the toy
recall crisis." Monitoring has been intensified to cover the entire process of
production, including product design, raw materials and paint," according to Wu.
Poisonous paint was one of the major complaints in a
spate of toy recall dramas in the past few months, which the domestic toy-making
industry rejected as individual but not common cases.
It's the third time Wu Yi has headed a product
quality inspection group in the past three months. The previous two examined
food factories, restaurants and farm produce bases in Zhejiang, Shanghai and
Shandong.
"The product safety campaign has been very successful
so far, and we have made major breakthroughs in supervision over small food
producers and children's toy makers," Wu said.
About 499 tons of highly poisonous pesticide such as
methamidophos had been seized in a crackdown on the use of banned drugs in farm
produce and feedstuffs in the past three months, said Li Changjiang, director of
the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine
(GAQSIQ), who was also at the conference.
Wholesale markets of farm produce in 676 large and
medium-sized cities have been put under the monitoring of relevant authorities,
Li said.
Li also revealed that 96.3 percent of the country's
food producers had been licensed, while 98.7 percent of the small food
workshops, considered a major threat to public food safety, had pledged product
safety in written documents.
"We have also checked all the production bases of raw
materials for food exports, and all the shipping packages of exported food have
been imprinted with the quarantine and quality check marks," Li said.
Shao Mingli, head of the State Food and Drug
Administration (SFDA), said the administration has taken back 157 Good
Manufacturing Practice (GMP) certificates and shut down nearly 300drug producers
and medical appliance manufacturers.
It has also established a network of drug supply to
cover more than 90 percent of the rural areas, Shao said.
A total of 626 criminal cases involving the production or sale of substandard food, drugs and farm produce were filed during the campaign, with 774 suspects brought under control, according to the State Council.