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Qu Ruie (R), a supervisor to the
Dongfang Dairy Company, supervises the inspecting process of milk in
Xi'an, north China's Shannxi Province, Oct. 4, 2008. Calling China's
diary production and circulation "chaotic" and admitting government
supervision "gravely absent", the State Council is planning an overhaul
and recovery of the nation's diary industry. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, Oct. 6 (Xinhua) -- Calling
China's dairy production and distribution "chaotic" and admitting government
supervision "gravely absent", the State Council is planning an overhaul for the
recovery of the nation's dairy industry.
The State Council, China's Cabinet, held an executive meeting Monday on the
nation's milk powder industry and approved draft regulations on quality control
for dairy products.
State Councilors on Monday heard that the authorities had conducted
across-the-board checks on liquid milk and dairy products and investigated food
safety. All efforts had begun to pay off.
They noted that the Sanlu baby formula scandal had been
a major public health incident and tarnished the reputation of China's
dairy sector and the food industry at large.
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Tong Xianming, a supervisor to the
Yinqiao Dairy Company, displays daily report forms in Xi'an, north China's
Shannxi Province, Oct. 4, 2008. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
The direct cause of the incident was illegal production, greed and ignoring
of people's lives, the State Council said in a statement. "It is also exposed
that China's dairy production and distribution order has been chaotic and
supervision has been be gravely absent."
Premier Wen Jiabao presided over the meeting. This was the second
conference on the issue since the tainted baby formula scandal that broke in
earlier September. The previous meeting was held on Sept. 17.
The State Council on Monday stressed that efforts should be made to
scrutinize every link, from farm to dinner table, of food processing, so as to
"restore the reputation of the nation's food industry, enhance consumer
confidence and ensure public health."
The government underscored the principles of the scrutiny: to put the
people first, ensure safety, prescribe responsibilities clearly, intensify
supervision, monitor the whole process, realize information disclosure, improve
institutional systems and criteria and ensure accountability.
Follow-up work should be done properly. Free examinations and medical
treatment should continue to be provided for infants at risk from the
problematic milk powder, with examinations and hospitalization to be enhanced in
rural and remote areas.
Those responsible for the contamination, including producers, traders and
officials, should be penalized in accordance with laws and regulations, the
State Council said.
The normal order of the domestic dairy market should be restored, with the
suspension of production at enterprises that recorded poor product quality and
imperfect quality guarantee systems. Milk collecting stations should be
overhauled, and the threshold for the milk market should be raised. Quality
criteria for the wider food industry should be improved.
Meanwhile, dairy farmers in major areas should be supported financially.
The meeting approved draft regulations on quality control for dairy
products. The regulations stipulated stricter and detailed rules on animal
husbandry, fresh milk collection, dairy production, domestic sales and import
and export of dairy products.
The Sanlu Group, a leading dairy producer based in northern Hebei Province,
admitted on Sept. 12 that it had found some of its baby milk powder products
were contaminated with melamine.
Contaminated baby formula has killed at least three infants and left more
than 53,000 with urinary tract problems, including kidney stones. About 13,000
infants are still being treated in hospitals.
The General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and
Quarantine (AQSIQ) had sent more than 5,000 inspectors to carry out
round-the-clock scrutiny at dairy factories to restore consumer confidence in
the wake of the tainted milk scandal.
Wang Yong, AQSIQ chief, told Xinhua that the government would strive to
ensure all dairy products manufactured after Sept. 14 were melamine-free and
safe.
Quality sample checks have been conducted on the products of other major
brands including Mengniu, Yili, Bright Dairy and Sanyuan.
The administration said on Sunday that latest tests on dairy products
nationwide had found no traces of melamine.
A total of 437 food quality inspection institutions across the country had
been certified by Sunday to conduct testing of melamine, the industrial chemical
used to cheat on protein tests of diluted raw milk, according to the AQSIQ.
The Ministry of Health has dispatched more than 1,600 medical teams, involving more than 8,000 people, to deal with the problem. More than 4,500 medical institutions nationwide have helped with medical tests.
Inspectors posted to dairy factories
for 24-hour supervision
BEIJING,
Oct. 5 (Xinhua) -- China's quality supervision authority has dispatched more
than 5,000 inspectors to carry out round-the-clock scrutiny at dairy factories
in an effort to restore consumer confidence in the wake of the scandal over the
melamine contamination of milk.
Wang Yong, director of the General Administration of
Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine (GAQSIQ), told Xinhua that the
government would strive to ensure all dairy products manufactured after Sept. 14
were melamine-free and safe.
China quality watchdog: New liquid
milk supplies melamine free
BEIJING, Oct.4 (Xinhua) -- The latest sample test detected no melamine in newly
supplied liquid milk on China's market, the country's quality watchdog said
Saturday.
Samples of 609 batches of liquid milk from 27 cities
across China were found free of melamine, said the General Administration of
Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine (AQSIQ).
Full story
China central gov't to subsidize dairy
farmers after tainted milk
scandal
BEIJING, Oct. 4 (Xinhua)
-- China's Ministry of Agriculture said Saturday it had made an emergency rescue
plan with the Ministry of Finance to give special subsidies to the country's
dairy farmers, who have suffered from shrinking demand after the tainted milk
scandal.
Fewer dairy farmers were dumping raw milk as government
support policies to shield them from losses paid off, said the ministry in a
statement on its website. Full story