It last updated the figures on Sept 21, when it said that 12,892 children were being treated for kidney problems caused by drinking milk tainted with the industrial chemical melamine, which is at the centre of the country's latest food safety scare. -- PHOTO: AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE
BEIJING - CHINA said it understood the global concern over its food exports Thursday, as the official tally of children hospitalised after drinking tainted milk more than tripled to nearly 47,000.
The nation issued nearly US$44 million (S$64.6 million) in subsidies for its beleaguered dairy farmers who have been hit hard by the scandal as the nation weans itself off milk products.
HK finds melamine in biscuits
HONG KONG - HONG Kong's food safety watchdog said on Thursday it had found illegal levels of the industrial chemical melamine in some biscuits, the latest China-made product to be exposed as unsafe.
Tests by the Centre for Food Safety found that 'EDO Pack Almond Cacao Biscuit Sticks' contained unsafe levels of the chemical at the centre of the food safety scare in China.
Nearly 11,000 children remain in hospital for poisoning from drinking milk products laced with the toxic chemical melamine, while around 36,000 were previously hospitalised but have since been allowed to go home, the health ministry said.
This makes for a total of 46,810 children who have been hospitalised for kidney problems caused by the melamine, up from 14,471 according to the previous data from the health ministry on September 21.
Health ministry officials said this week they had updated figures for the total number of children - both inpatient and outpatient - affected by drinking tainted milk powder but they refused to make the figure public.
Officials continued efforts to contain the scandal as Brazil announced this week it was banning the import of Chinese food products after a series of nations took similar measures.
'We have noted that due to this (milk) incident some countries including Brazil have taken measures and we understand this,' foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang told journalists.
'It is the responsibility of all countries of the world to safeguard the safety and health of their peoples but we should remain realistic and sober.' Mr Qin insisted China was making every effort to clean up its dairy industry, inspect all food exports and immediately report to its trading partners any tainted exports discovered in the process.
At least four children have died after melamine was added to a range of dairy products, including infant milk formula, falsely making the goods appear to contain higher levels of protein.
Although the tainted milk was discovered as early as March this year, industry and government cover-ups kept the scandal out of the state media until early September.
Meanwhile, the government announced Thursday 300 million yuan (S$60 million dollars) in subsidies for the nation's beleaguered dairy farmers who have been hit hard by the scandal.
Farmers in China's main dairy regions of Inner Mongolia, Hebei, Liaoning, Shanxi and Shandong provinces would be the main beneficiaries of the programme, a joint statement issued by the finance and agricultural ministries said.
The 300 million yuan in funds would be handed down from central finance departments for local governments to distribute according to conditions on the farms, it added.
So far up to 27 people have been arrested in the scandal, which largely centres around wholesale milk buyers who watered down the product and added melamine before selling it to diary processors. -- AFP