BEIJING, Feb. 19 (Xinhua) -- In the past two weeks, Tianyang Food Plant, in north China's Hebei Province, has undergone numerous investigations from both Chinese and Japanese authorities concerning the "dumplings poisoning case." No problems, however, have ever been found in the food processing.
The plant has suspended operation since Jan. 30 when
the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine
(AQSIQ), China's quality watchdog, made a public announcement to investigate the
food poisoning case. The investigation started hours after it learned from the
Japanese authorities that at least 10 people in the Hyogo and Chiba prefectures
had become sick since December after eating dumplings produced by Tianyang Food
Plant.
After thorough inspection, both investigators and the
media said the factory was clean and tidy, and they found nothing abnormal.
Tianyang Food Plant is a state-owned enterprise with
a 10-year history of exporting food products. It sent 3,970 tons of dumplings to
Japan last year.
"We have strict control on production and quality,"
said Di Menglu, head of Tianyang. "Workers wear work clothes that cover them
from head to toe and they have to pass through two checkpoints before entering
the production area."
Hebei Entry-Exit Inspection and Quarantine Bureau
carried out a routine sanitary checkup on the plant every six months. "Based on
our records, we have never found problems in raw materials and processed food in
the plant," said Cheng Fang, the bureau director.
China's exported food and other products have been
under foreign criticism since early last year, from wheat gluten to toothpaste
to toys and tires. Many countries and regions implemented bans, which brought
great losses to Chinese export enterprises.
China-made food has been exported to more than 200
countries and regions, and 99 percent of the products are up to standard,
according to the white paper -- "China's food quality and safety" -- published
by the State Council, China's Cabinet, last year.
Since last year, China has stepped up efforts to
enforce surveillance over food safety. A special leading group office was set up
by the State Council in July to deal with matters concerning product quality or
food safety.
In August, a nationwide crackdown on substandard
products was carried out and lasted four months.
The government also launched a system of "red" and
"black" lists of enterprises and posted the results on the Internet. Those
deemed "black" were forbidden to sell or export products.
According to the statistics by the Japanese
authorities, the acceptance rate of the exported food to the country in 2006 was
99.42 percent. The acceptance rate of food Japan imported from the European
Union and the United States was 99.38 percent and 98.69 percent respectively.
Despite the poisoning case in Japan, citizens in the
Republic of Korea still prefer food imported from China during their traditional
Lunar New Year. A Korea Times article recently stated that "Though the dumplings
poisoning case is still under criticism in Japan and many other countries, the
Korean traditional festival can not do without China's food."
Some Japanese media also called on the public to keep
calm and refrain from being oversensitive about the poisoning
case.