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Deliberate contamination of dumplings on its side impossible: China
BEIJING—A senior Chinese
quality control official said Wednesday there was no possibility of
deliberate contamination of dumplings on the China side as the plant
were strictly managed.
China would continue to step up checkups in the production, packaging,
and transport of food products made by Tianyang Food Plant, said Wei
Chuanzhong, deputy chief of the General Administration of Quality
Supervision, Inspection, and Quarantine (AQSIQ). Japanese police have so
far confirmed at least 10 people fell sick after eating dumplings laced
with the highly toxic organophosphate pesticide called methamidophos
made by Tianyang Food in northern China’s Hebei Province.
Investigations by Japanese police indicated the poisoning case was more
likely a deliberate one, rather than a food safety scare, Wei said.
China was ready for sincere cooperation and joint investigation with
Japan to seek the truth behind the poisoning case, amid efforts to
safeguard Japanese people’s safety and bilateral strategic relations, he
noted.
“China is willing to work with Japan to set up a long-term food safety
mechanism between the two neighbors. We hope investigators could soon
find the truth and publicize it to reduce the damage to the bilateral
relations,” he said after meeting a four-member Japanese investigation
team in Beijing. Wei said he hoped the Japanese instigators would tell
exactly what they saw in China after going back to guide more impartial
and rational media report, instead of reporting exaggeration on
groundless speculation.
A joint investigation team of China and Japan said early Wednesday
morning they had not detected abnormality in the Tianyang Food after a
half-day investigation tour to the company. “The plant is very clean and
well managed, and no abnormality has been detected,” Harashima Taiji,
head of the Japanese investigation team, told the press. Japan would
conduct further analysis based on information and data collected in the
plant, he said.
Taiji added the Japanese side hoped to get more support in later
investigation after touring the plant and getting all the materials it
wished to check. Japanese media reported nearly 300 people have sought
medical treatment, with one girl in serious condition, since a Japanese
company said last week frozen meat dumplings produced at the Tianyang
Food contained insecticide.
Japanese authorities found an insecticide called methamidophos in the
vomit of the poisoned people and food packages at their houses. But
tests showed that the rest of the dumplings from the same batches sold
in Japan, totaling more than 2,000 packages, were safe. So were all the
other products made by the Chinese company, Wang Daning, director of
AQSIQ’s department of food import and export safety, said earlier.
Earlier report said while suspicious clues such as small holes on some
packages remain inexplicable, it’s currently still unknown whether the
food products were contaminated during the production and transportation
process in China. Chinese and Japanese officials concluded their talks
Wednesday over a food poisoning case involving Chinese-made frozen
dumplings, with the two sides reaching an agreement to continue
cooperation to look for the real cause of the incident.
The Chinese side is willing to fully cooperate and go on to share
information with the Japanese side, Li Chunfeng, head of the five-member
Chinese team, told press after the third round of talks at the Japanese
Cabinet Office. Li said China is poised to set up a joint investigation
team with Japan to seek an early answer to the case. Full story
China will “make a thorough investigation” into the frozen dumpling
poisoning case, said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao on
Tuesday. “We should know what are the problems and where are the
loopholes, and that is the responsible attitude toward the consumers,”
he said. According to earlier Japanese media reports, nearly 300 people
have sought medical treatment, with one girl in serious condition, since
a Japanese company last week said that frozen meat dumplings produced at
the Tianyang Food Plant in Hebei Province, north China, contained
insecticide.
The Japanese media’s concern on this issue was understandable, Liu said,
stressing that a scientific perspective and staying calm are needed to
deal with the issue with a responsible attitude toward the consumers.—Xinhua |