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Horsemeat with banned drug entered French food chain

 
Published on Feb 24, 2013
6:19 AM
The outside of a butchers where horsemeat is available, in Paris, Friday Feb. 15, 2013. Tests have found horsemeat in school meals, hospital food and restaurant dishes in Britain, officials said Friday, as the scandal over adulterated meat spread beyond frozen supermarket products. French French Consumer Affairs Minister Benoit Hamon said Thursday that it appeared fraudulent meat sales over several months reached across 13 countries and 28 companies. He identified French meat wholesaler Spanghero as a major culprit. -- PHOTO: AP

PARIS (REUTERS) - Meat from three horse carcasses contaminated with a banned drug has entered the human food chain in France but there is no danger to the public, the French farm minister said on Saturday.

The meat, which came from a lot of six British carcasses exported to France, contained traces of phenylbutazone - known as bute - an anti-inflammatory painkiller for sporting horses, banned for animals intended for eventual human consumption.

French Agriculture Minister Stephane Le Foll said there was no danger to public health. "One would have to eat 500 horse hamburgers every day in order to run a risk," he told reporters at the Paris farm show.

The six carcasses arrived in January at a firm in northern France that specialises in horse meat products. Three were intercepted in time.

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