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U.S. and Chinese Officials Discuss Food Safety
By Stephanie Ho
| Beijing
Posted on Wednesday, November 9, 2011
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Main Page of Sunburst on
the World
Newspapers in
China these days are filled with horror stories of egregious
food safety violations, which are prompting Chinese people
to be more aware of the food they eat. The issue is also of
concern to Americans, who are eating more food imported from
China.
Photo by Greg from Richmond, VA |
Slideshow by JoAnne Green
Wu Heng, a
25-year-old Chinese university student in Shanghai, became
so fed up with what has seemed like a never ending stream of
food safety scandals that in June, he started a website that
collects and summarizes reports on food safety issues.
Wu says he was spurred into action after reading a report
about fake beef - which was basically cheaper pork dressed
up with additives to look like more expensive beef. He was
shocked and angry to realize that he was among those who had
consumed fake beef.
The website has so far documented more than 2,000 food
safety cases, culled from the Internet and Chinese media.
Wu says the data show the number of food safety violations
decreased from 2008 to 2010, but started increasing again
this year.
Powdered milk scandal
China's problems with food safety were
catapulted to national headlines in 2008, when milk powder
tainted with the industrial chemical melamine led to the
deaths of six babies and sickened hundreds of thousands of
others.
Qiu Baochang, a lawyer with the
China Consumers Association,
a government-funded organization that was established in
late 1984, acknowledges there have been a host of food
safety problems. He cites chemicals added to old mantou buns
to make them seem fresh, and a scandal involving restaurants
that re-used dirty and sometimes toxic cooking oil.
Qiu says the government is paying great attention to the
issue and the public tends to exaggerate the problem.
Qiu
thinks food safety in China is much better than five years
ago, but says many people feel the situation is much worse
because of the Internet - which can spread stories quickly.
He says the Internet stories are not always factual and make
things seem worse than they really are, which, in his words,
could create public terror.
U.S. Response
Other countries are responding to concerns about the safety
of the global food trade with new legislation. Earlier this
year, the United States enacted the
Food Safety Modernization Act,
which requires food importers verify the safety of the food
that increasingly comes from overseas suppliers.
“We have had
global tripling in the last decade of import entries of food
coming into this country, and China has certainly been a big
part of that,” explained Michael Taylor, the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration’s deputy commissioner for foods.
This month, Taylor and his colleagues held meetings in
Beijing with their Chinese counterparts on food safety
issues. He says the main goal was to explain the Food
Safety Modernization Act’s new rules, and seek comment from
Chinese government and industry.
“Beginning after the first of next year, we expect
substantial comments from the Chinese perspective, on the
rule and what the rule should be,” Taylor said.
As U.S. food imports grow, so do the challenges for
maintaining food safety.
Additional measures
Murray Lumpkin, the U.S. Food & Drug Administration's
representative for global issues, says his agency stationed
its first employee overseas only three years ago.
“FDA is not like some of the other agencies within the U.S.
government that have a long history of placing staff
overseas. This is really quite new for us," Lumpkin said.
"And we are, fundamentally, a domestic consumer protection
agency. What gets us involved outside of the U.S., as you
have been hearing, is that so many of the products for which
we are responsible in the United States now come from
outside the United States.”
One of the largest exporters of food products to the United
States, China has indicated it is willing to work with other
countries on safety.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei calls food
import and export a major part of business cooperation. He
says China believes food safety is important to enhancing
bilateral cooperation and normal relations.
As an increasing volume of food products move from China to
the United States, there are also American ideas about food
safety making their way to China. Student Wu Heng says one
basic food safety inspiration for him came from one of the
first exposes of American food safety problems.
Wu says he was inspired by American writer Upton Sinclair,
whose book The Jungle describes the meat packing
industry in Chicago more than 100 years ago.
The Chinese student recounts a story in which then U.S.
President Teddy Roosevelt was said to be reading The
Jungle while he was eating breakfast at the White
House. When he read about the book’s description of horrible
working conditions and unsanitary food preparations, he is
reported to have screamed and thrown his food out the
window.
Whether or not the events actually happened this way, the
incident is immortalized in the title for Wu’s website:
“Throw It Out the Window.”
(Source:
VOA News, 11/09/2011)
