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Dumpling poisoning in Japan isolated incident, calling for mutual trust:
China
BEIJING—A recent dumpling
poisoning case in Japan was only an “isolated incident”, China’s
commerce minister said on Wednesday, calling for more mutual trust.
“I hope the two sides can carry out close and friendly cooperation and
discussion to address the issue,” Commerce Minister Chen Deming told
reporters on the sidelines of the annual session of China’s parliament.
He said that the government attached great importance to product quality
and food safety, and the dumpling poisoning had been found not to be
related to product quality but was a single isolated incident.
“It’s been not easy for China and Japan to get their ties thawed and
back to normal,” he said.
“Mutual trust should be given top priority in building a strategic
relationship of mutual benefits, to which the two countries are
committed,” he said.
Wang Shouwen, director of the Foreign Trade Department under Chen’s
ministry, told the press conference that the food trade between China
and Japan was complementary.
“China’s food exports have satisfied much Japanese consumer demand,” he
said, noting that a quarter of China’s food exports went to Japan. Those
exports accounted for 16 percent of Japanese food imports.
“Today, 90 percent of the garlic, peanuts and mushroom on the dining
tables of Japanese people are imported from China,” he said. China is
Japan’s largest trading partner, while Japan is China’s third-largest
trading partner.
In January, Japanese media reported that some people fell ill after
eating frozen meat dumplings produced by the Tianyang Food Plant based
in north China’s Hebei Province.
After thorough investigation, China’s General Administration of Quality
Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine said in late February that the
incident was an individual deliberate case, not a case of food safety
resulting from pesticide residue.
Further cooperation between China and Japan would be required to
investigate the incident, Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi told a
separate news conference on Wednesday.
“We hope that relevant departments on both sides, the police in
particular, can have more communication and cooperation in a
cool-headed, fair, objective and scientific manner to conduct a
coordinated investigation and find the truth as early as possible,” Yang
said.
He believed it necessary to establish a long-term China-Japan food
safety cooperation mechanism to carry out more timely and effective
cooperation, adding both sides expected such a mechanism could soon be
set up.
The foreign minister stressed that China had conducted a serious,
responsible investigation into the incident and had quickly released
initial results since the government had taken safety seriously and
responsibly for local and foreign consumers.
—Daily Mail, People’s Daily news exchange item |