Quote:
FDA detains Chinese seafood due to drug fears
Five species tested for chemicals; U.S. says no immediate threat
AP Updated: 8:24 p.m. ET June 28, 2007
WASHINGTON - Farmed seafood joined tires, toothpaste and toy trains on the list of tainted and defective products from China that could be hazardous to a person’s health.
Federal health officials said Thursday that they were detaining three types of Chinese fish — catfish, basa and dace — as well as shrimp and eel after repeated testing has turned up contamination with drugs unapproved in the United States for use in farmed seafood.
The officials said there was no immediate health risk and stopped short of ordering an outright ban.
The Food and Drug Administration announcement was only the latest in an expanding series of problems with imported Chinese products that seemingly permeate U.S. society.
Beyond the fish, federal regulators have warned consumers in recent weeks about lead paint in toy trains, defective tires, and toothpaste made with diethylene glycol, a toxic ingredient more commonly found in antifreeze. All the products were imported from China.
This spring, 154 brands of pet food were recalled after tainted ingredients that killed an unknown number of cats and dogs were traced to two Chinese companies by the Food and Drug Administration.
China guarantees safety
China, meanwhile, insisted Thursday that the safety of its products was “guaranteed,” making a rare direct comment on spreading international fears over tainted and adulterated exports.
FDA officials said the levels of the drugs in the seafood was low. The FDA isn’t asking for stores or consumers to toss any of the suspect seafood.
“In order to get cancer in lab animals you have to feed fairly high levels of the drug over a long term,” said Dr. David Acheson, the FDA’s assistant commissioner for food protection. “We’re talking not days, weeks, not even months but years. At these levels you might not reach that level, but we don’t want to take a chance.”
He added, “We don’t want to be alarmist here. ... it’s a low likelihood.”
The FDA said sampling of Chinese imported fish between October and May repeatedly found traces of the antibiotics nitrofuran and fluoroquinolone, as well as the antifungals malachite green and gentian violet. Of particular concern are the fluoroquinolones, a family of widely used human antibiotics that the FDA forbids in seafood in part to prevent bacteria from developing resistance to these important drugs. The best known example is ciprofloxacin, sold as Cipro, which made headlines as a treatment during the 2001 anthrax attacks.
The FDA will allow individual shipments of the five seafood species into the country if a company can show the products are free of residues of these drugs.
“This action will put a hold on the products of concern at the port of entry. This shifts the burden of proof back to the importer to prove to us that it is safe,” Acheson said.
Not a new concern
China is the third largest exporter of seafood to the United States, according to the FDA. More than half of its global seafood exports are farmed. But only about 5 percent of farmed Chinese fish is inspected by the FDA, agency officials said.
The use of drugs in foreign fish farming operations has long been a concern of federal and state regulators. Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi recently banned imports of catfish from China after tests detected antibiotics not approved for use in humans.
“Clearly the addition of these drugs, it’s a deliberate event,” Margaret Glavin, the FDA’s associate commissioner for regulatory affairs, told reporters. “If they stop adding them the problem is going to go away.”
The FDA acted after finding problems with 15 percent of the Chinese seafood it tested. Glavin said the FDA also has found companies in the Philippines and Mexico using the drugs and has issued similar import alerts for those firms’ products.
© 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Spike J wrote:
Maybe all this news publicity will spur some good ole' american patriotism .
zero wrote:Spike J wrote:
Maybe all this news publicity will spur some good ole' american patriotism .
I don't think we're allowed to have that anymore.
zero wrote:Spike J wrote:
Maybe all this news publicity will spur some good ole' american patriotism .
I don't think we're allowed to have that anymore.
Keeper of the Light wrote:If Iraq, Iran, Palestine, Libya, Israel, Gernamy, Russia, Austrio-Hungary, and the Ottoman Empire have told us anything, we could use a lot less patriotism. It tends to do nothing buy destroy and kill for no other reason than for the dirt you were shat onto.
Quote:
China's army worries about threat to food safety
....This week, domestic media reported on dumplings found to have been stuffed with cardboard scraps.....
Quote:
China blames foreign media for food health scares
Mon Jul 16, 12:33 AM ET
BEIJING (Reuters) - Foreign media have fuelled unfounded fears about Chinese products, the nation's top quality official has said, as China blocked a U.S. protein powder shipment while the two countries sparred over safety worries.
The deaths of patients in Panama from mislabeled drug ingredients from China, deadly toxins in pet food ingredients and food laced with additives and antibiotics have fanned public anxiety in the United States about the safety of China's surging exports.
But foreign reports about tainted Chinese foods had presented isolated failings as the whole picture, said Li Changjiang, head of the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine.
"Some foreign media, especially those based in the U.S., have wantonly reported on so-called unsafe Chinese products. They are turning white to black," he said, according to the China Daily on Monday.
"One company's problem doesn't make it a country's problem."
Chinese inspectors announced that a protein powder from a U.S. supplier contained too much selenium and was being sent back, the official Xinhua news agency reported on Monday.
Selenium is a trace mineral essential in small amounts, but too much of it can cause stomach upsets, hair loss and other problems.
At the weekend, China also suspended pork and poultry from some U.S. suppliers after finding salmonella-contaminated chicken and meat products with growth agents or other additives.
The bans, widely reported in the Chinese media, appeared to be Beijing's latest reminder that anxieties about product quality could also be directed at U.S. goods.
Companies affected by the meat ban include some of the giants of American agriculture, including a unit of the private Cargill Inc., and Tyson Foods, the leading U.S. producer of fresh beef and No. 2 producer of chicken and pork.
Another official from the Chinese quality inspection agency, Li Chuanqing, said foreign companies had exaggerated public worries about Chinese goods for their own ends.
An editorial in the overseas edition of the People's Daily, the ruling Communist Party's official paper, said it was inevitable that the country's rising exports would face tighter scrutiny from choosy foreign customers.
But it also blamed foreign forces seeking to undermine Chinese industry.
"In recent years those people churning out the theory of a China threat have grabbed hold of this issue and not let go, treating isolated cases as the whole and maliciously attacking 'Made in China'," the paper said.
China's criticisms of foreign media and companies are unlikely to alter widespread U.S. public anxiety about foods, medical ingredients, toys and other goods.
Last month, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced a temporary hold on imports of some Chinese seafood until suppliers could prove they were free of harmful residues.
Poorly regulated food and drug safety standards have been a problem for years in China, which has about half a million food processors. The Chinese government has moved in recent weeks to attack the problem, promising stricter oversight.
Last week it executed the former head of its Food and Drug Administration for corruptly approving unsafe drugs.
The People's Daily overseas edition said the country's manufacturers needed to raise their standards.
"If international consumers enjoy high-quality 'Made-in-China,' what do we have to fear from media alarmism?"
Quote:
Fisher-Price recalling 1.5 million toys
By Nicole Maestri
53 minutes ago
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Mattel Inc. is recalling 1.5 million Chinese-made toys worldwide because their paint may contain too much lead-- the latest in a deluge of product safety scares that have tainted the "made in China" brand.
The recalled toys made for Mattel's Fisher-Price unit include popular preschool characters like Elmo and Big Bird along with dozens of other items.
They were made by a contract manufacturer in China using a non-approved paint pigment containing lead, Mattel said on Wednesday.
Lead paint has been linked to health problems in children, including brain damage.
Mattel is asking U.S. consumers and sellers to return 967,000 plastic toys and is recalling another 533,000 from other countries, including Britain, Canada and Mexico.
Mattel's senior vice president of worldwide quality assurance, Jim Walter, said the recall could hit all its markets and traced the problem to a single manufacturer.
"The disappointment here was we had a single contract manufacturer that we had a long-standing relationship with, who did not do what is required by Mattel," Walter said.
The recall comes amid heightened concern worldwide about the safety of China's exports. Many of the previous problem products have involved smaller manufacturers, but now a major company in a sensitive sector has been hit.
"Nobody wants to face that PR nightmare," said Kent Kedl, the Shanghai head of Technomic Asia, which advises companies sourcing out of China. "But the reality is that things slip through the cracks. And the cracks are a little bit bigger here in China."
Walter said the toy maker had launched an investigation. Mattel had stopped producing and shipping toys from that manufacturer, but said it would wait for the findings of the investigation to decide whether to keep doing business with it.
"GOOD AND SAFE"
China has fought back against consumer concern by promising tough quality controls but also accusing foreign media of "alarmist" reporting that could stoke a protectionist backlash.
"Over 99 percent of China's export products are good and safe," Commerce Minister Bo Xilai said in Beijing on Wednesday, according to the ministry Web site (www.mofcom.gov.cn).
"We hope that concerned parties can treat Chinese products objectively, fairly and rationally. Don't let this damage the normal development of trade."
In the United States, the Fisher-Price toys were sold nationwide at retail stores between May and August, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission said.
Mattel said U.S. consumers should contact Fisher-Price to arrange a product return.
Mattel said it became aware of the problem in early July and was working with retailers to remove the toys from shelves. It also said it was intercepting shipments to avert further sales.
Of the nearly 1 million products recalled from the U.S. market, Mattel said about 30 percent had reached store shelves.
It declined to identify the manufacturer. In China, offices of Mattel's suppliers referred inquiries back to its head office.
President George W. Bush has ordered a review of U.S. rules intended to keep out harmful imports following a series of scares involving Chinese goods this year.
The United States has stepped up inspections of goods from China after a chemical additive in pet food caused the death of some pets. Toxic ingredients were also found in Chinese fish and toothpaste exports, while the deaths of patients in Panama were blamed on improperly labeled Chinese chemicals mixed into cough syrup.
Chinese-made toy trains were recalled in the United States in June because some may have contained lead paint.
Kedl, the consultant, said China was too important as a manufacturing base for foreign companies to abandon, but they were likely to tread more carefully.
"Multinationals will be more cautious, re-evaluating the cost of doing business in China, but no, they will not quit China."
(Additional reporting by Chris Buckley and Kirby Chien in Beijing)
GAM (The Kilted One) wrote:Anyone remember the character that Dan Aykroyd played on SNL.. Irwin Mainway? He'd sell dangerous toys: Bag O' Glass, Bag O' Vipers, Johnny Space Commander Mask, Johnny Human Torch....
This kinda reminds me of that.
AGuSTiN wrote:zero wrote:Spike J wrote:
Maybe all this news publicity will spur some good ole' american patriotism .
I don't think we're allowed to have that anymore.
To hell with that. My flags are coming out tomorow!
GAM (The Kilted One) wrote:Uh huh...
Either way, if I can buy Chinese, and the same product from North America at the same price: I'll take US.