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Toy, food recalls introduced
Beijing—The country’s top
quality watchdog on Friday introduced landmark recall systems that
require producers to take back unsafe toys and foodstuffs.
If producers do not carry out recalls on their own, the government will
order a recall and fine the producers up to three times the value of the
products, according to two regulations published by the General
Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection, and Quarantine (AQSIQ).
The two regulations, introduced with immediate effect, follow the
introduction of a recall system for defective automobiles in 2005. Both
regulations state that producers must inform the public and retailers,
and report to the quality control authorities if it is revealed that
their products are unsafe. Retailers must immediately stop selling the
products and launch a timely investigation into the defects or they will
face a fine ranging from 1,000 to 50,000 yuan ($132 to $6,600).
Even if the products meet the country’s quality safety regulations and
standards, the regulations note that toymakers should still carry out a
recall if their toys are found to be potentially unsafe.
If producers fail to voluntarily recall their products, which then cause
serious public harm, they will have their production licenses revoked
and be subject to criminal charges, according to the regulations. Liu
Zhaobin, director of the AQSIQ’s policy and legislation department, said
the recall systems were designed to strengthen the State Council Special
Regulations on the Safety Supervision and Administration of Food and
Other Products, issued in July.
“Our regulations make it very clear that producers must take the prior
and major responsibilities for preventing and eliminating unsafe
products,” he told a press briefing. Yet the AQSIQ should set up a
management system of all recall information and evaluate the recalls
under the regulations.
Liu said the country did recall unsafe food and toys in the past, but it
was done “case by case” without a sound system. The food and toy recall
systems follow the issuing of a draft regulation on drug recall last
month by the State Food and Drug Administration (SFDA), which stipulated
similar recall procedures for unsafe drugs and medical devices. The
AQSIQ also issued a regulation to standardize the inspection and
quarantine of exported aquatic products.
“As the world’s largest aquatic products exporter since 2002, China
needs such a regulation to offer a legal basis for the inspection of
such products,” Liu said. These latest moves follow a spate of safety
scares over made-in-China products. Reports have revealed isolated cases
of contaminated food additives, unsafe toothpaste, seafood and even
toys, and sparked global concern over Chinese products in general.—Xinhua |