By Xinhua writer Jiang Xufeng
BEIJING, Dec. 9 (Xinhua) -- China is to launch a
nationwide campaign on improving food safety in mid-December to better protect
its children and teenagers, Cheng Zhigang, a spokesman with the campaign leading
group, said here on Sunday.
Initiated by China Soong Ching Ling Foundation last
August, the campaign was jointly launched by 11 government departments including
the National Development and Reform Commission, ministries of education,
agriculture, commerce and health and the General Administration of Quality
Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine.
"Its goal is to spread food safety and nutrition
knowledge to children and their parents, help youngsters have healthy dietary
habits and regulate domestic food market", said Cheng.
During the campaign, the organizer will adopt
tangible measures including establishing a special fund for children's food
safety, formulating national standards for food quality catering for children
and supervising food quality in groceries and supermarkets in rural areas.
Official figures show that China has more than 400
million children and teenagers under the age of 18.
Several leading domestic food and beverage
enterprises have also been involved in this endeavor including the country's
leading fruit juice maker Huiyuan Group, the first strategic partner of the
campaign.
"The reason why our company began to put out the
country's first series of tailor-made nutritious juice products for children at
present after collecting 15 years of manufacturing experience is that we regard
food quality as the top priority," Zhu Xinli, Chairman of Huiyuan, told Xinhua
at Friday's new product launch ceremony.
"The world's most advanced PET sterilized cold
filling technique is employed in the manufacturing process and all the packaging
materials are safe environment-friendly materials," said Li Ying, project
manager of the children-customized juice products.
In recent months, Chinese industries have been the
focus of numerous reports about substandard products, especially food. The
scandals have included vegetables containing pesticide residue, fish
contaminated with suspected carcinogens and eggs tainted with the industrial dye
Sudan Red.
"The future of our nation lies in children's hands
and food and beverage companies should provide them with healthy and nutritious
food," said Zhu Xinli, also a member of the campaign's expert panel.
In response to the reported scandals, the Chinese
government introduced a new recall system last summer, began a four-month
nationwide product quality campaign ending in December and issued a measure that
requires labeling of all food exports with an inspection and quarantine symbol.
Official statistics revealed that, 626 criminal cases
involving774 suspects had been filed over substandard food and drug products by
early November.
Chinese Vice Premier Wu Yi on Nov. 30 called on the
country's quality watchdogs to beef up quality checks of food ahead of the
coming Christmas and New Year holidays.