BEIJING, Jan. 12 -- One of the biggest
challenges for quality supervision in the country this year is rebuilding the
confidence of domestic and overseas consumers for its products, following the
tainted milk scandal, China's top quality supervisor said Sunday.
The nation still lacks an effective surveillance
system for food production and national standards on food safety need to be more
consistent, said Wang Yong, minister of the General Administration of Quality
Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine (AQSIQ).
Wang, a former Cabinet official, replaced Li
Changjiang, who resigned days after the milk scandal was uncovered last
September.
"The tainted milk powder incident severely hurt the
public's interests, greatly shook social stability and had a grave impact both
in China and overseas," Wang said in his speech to nearly 300 supervision
officials from across the country gathering in Beijing.
Milk products contaminated with the industrial
chemical melamine have so far sickened 296,000 infants nationwide, including six
who died from kidney stones formed after the products were taken, official
figures showed.
The authorities have made 60 arrests related to the
scandal.
The official website of the AQSIQ had received
complaints from victims' families as early as June last year, but it was only
after the media reported the scandal in September that the administration began
a thorough investigation and uncovered tainted products coming from 22 dairy
manufacturers nationwide.
The administration has reportedly checked 33 batches
of milk powder and 40 batches of liquid milk products in the country since its
first investigation on Sep. 14, with recent results showing the dairy products
are safe.
Sanlu Group, the main dairy involved in the melamine
scandal, has also said it will borrow 500 million yuan (73 million U.S. dollars)
from the local government to compensate its business partners. The collapsed
dairy giant based in Shijiazhuang, Hebei province, is also responsible for
paying 900 million yuan to families of victims hit by the scandal in a
controversial compensation scheme.
Wang said that his administration will assist other
ministries to revamp the risk analysis and recall system for products, as well
as eradicate the illegal use of substances like melamine in food production.
"The milk powder incident is a tough lesson that
shows the loopholes in the government's surveillance system," Wang said in his
address.
He also urged local supervision officials to respond
quickly to media reports on product quality and warned them against corruption.
Similarly, the ongoing Hebei annual legislative
meeting called on all related sectors to learn from the "grave mistakes" of the
Sanlu scandal.
Other than the dairy industry, Wang said his
administration will focus on agricultural products, construction materials, toys
and furniture.
(Source: China Daily)