March 2, 2009 Monday
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March 2, 2009
China food security 'grim'
China has been hit by a spate of food scares, most recent being tainted milk which killed infants. -- PHOTO: ASSOCIATED PRESS
BEIJING - CHINA said on Monday food security remains 'grim' after a series of health scandals, the most recent being last year's tainted milk formula which killed at least six toddlers and made almost 300,000 sick.

A new food-safety law, approved on Saturday in an accelerated process since the milk scandal came to light in September, attempts to fix a fragmentary regulatory system which officials blame for recurring problems.

'At present, China's food-security situation remains grim with high risks and contradictions,' the Ministry of Health said in documents handed to reporters on Monday.

The food-safety law, which takes effect on June 1, sets quality and safety standards for products and lays out a regulatory system as well as a risk-monitoring system.

China approved in principle a new food-safety law in October 2007 following scandals involving unsafe toothpaste, seafood and pet food, among other products.

Nonetheless, the children developed kidney stones after melamine, an industrial compound used in making plastics and fertiliser, was added to milk and other products to cheat protein tests, prompting Chinese-made products to be stripped from shelves worldwide.

A month later, the World Health Organisation's food safety chief, Jorgen Schlundt, called China's food-safety system 'disjointed' and said poor communications between ministries and agencies may have prolonged the melamine poisonings.

China sentenced two people to death in January for producing or selling milk adulterated with melamine, and jailed the chairwoman of now bankrupt dairy producer Sanlu Group for life, but the fall-out from the scandal continues.

A group of 54 people who say their children developed kidney stones and other illnesses after drinking melamine-adulterated milk are suing Qingdao Shengyuan Dairy Co Ltd for 8 million yuan (S$1.8 million) in damages, Li Jinglin, their lawyer, told Reuters on Monday.

It was unclear whether the court in the eastern city of Qingdao would accept the case. Calls placed to the court could not be connected. -- REUTERS

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