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China dumpling factory cleared

Published 7 February 2008

Inspectors clear Chinese dumpling facility of deliberately poisoning food exported to Japan; Chinese now blame nationalist activists opposed to improving Chinese-Japanese relations

We wrote the other day that Japanese security authorities suspected that frozen Chinese dumpling exported to Japan were poisoned on purpose at the Chinese facility. The BBC reports that inspectors say they found no problems at a Chinese factory making the dumplings. The imported dumplings poisoned at least ten people and put a girl in a coma in Japan. A group from Japan toured the Tianyang Foods factory in Hebei province on Wednesday and reported that it was clean and well-maintained. A senior Chinese official has said that activists opposed to improved Chinese relations with Japan could be to blame. The case has caused huge media interest and public alarm in Japan, where dumplings are a popular product. The dumplings were found to contain the highly toxic organophosphate pesticide methamidophos. A second contaminant, dichlorvos, was also detected but is not know to have caused any sickness. Japan Tobacco (JT), which imported the dumplings, has since recalled them and other Tianyang Foods products from sale. Company president Hiroshi Kimura apologised “from the bottom of my heart” for causing concerns about food safety. Media reports have criticised the company for taking a month to alert the public to initial reports of illness among consumers.

JT suffered not only humilation, but econonmic penalty as well: It has lost a proposed merger with the major Japanese company Nissin Food over the scandal. “When food poisoning takes place, it is a universal rule that food makers should immediately take action, such as a recall,” said Nissin Food president Koki Ando at a news conference confirming the decision. “There seems to be a fundamental difference between us and JT about food safety issues.”

The head of a Chinese delegation of food experts has asked the Japanese media to “trust the governments both of Japan and China and report on this with calm. Today is the eve of the Lunar New Year in China. More than one billion people will eat dumplings tonight,” he said in a press conference at which he appeared on the verge of tears. “I will eat dumplings myself tonight once I get back to Beijing.” China has been hit by a string of food and product safety scandals in recent years, including tainted toothpaste, contaminated pet food and high levels of lead in toys. Beijing introduced new laws last year aimed at tightening national standards in food production.

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