{"id":29431,"date":"2008-12-09T19:15:05","date_gmt":"2008-12-10T02:15:05","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/chinadigitaltimes.net\/?p=29431"},"modified":"2009-01-30T11:55:59","modified_gmt":"2009-01-30T18:55:59","slug":"coreys-wrap-up-post-food-product-safety-2008","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chinadigitaltimes.net\/2008\/12\/coreys-wrap-up-post-food-product-safety-2008\/","title":{"rendered":"China 2008: Food & Product Safety"},"content":{"rendered":"
CDT has produced a series of posts which summarize the key issues facing China in 2008. This latest installment focuses on food and product safety. Previous post in the China 2008 series include: China and the Developing World<\/a>, Nationalism, Internet Culture, and Identity<\/a>, Environmental Crisis<\/a>, The Global Financial Crisis<\/a>, the Revaluation of the Yuan<\/a>, Human Rights<\/a>, and China’s domestic market<\/a><\/strong>.<\/p>\n In the recent past, there have been many food safety issues in China.\u00a0 2004 was a scandalous year for tainted foods in China: a counterfeit milk powder resulted in over 60 infant deaths; noodles tainted with lead; vegetables pickled with pesticides and industrial-grade salt; counterfeit alcohol resulted in four deaths by alcohol poisoning; and soy sauces discovered to be made from human hair. In 2005, it was discovered that many firms in China, including Heinz and Kentucky Fried Chicken, were using Sudan I Red Dye<\/a> in food, a product that was banned in 1996 for causing cancer. In 2006, counterfeit drugs resulted in 16 deaths, and pesticide residue was discovered on exported vegetables.\u00a0 In 2007, melamine-tainted pet food<\/a> was exported around the world, resulting in untold numbers of animal deaths; China-made toothpaste was discovered to contain a toxic chemical found in antifreeze; and seafood was tainted with antibiotics, all raising international fears of Chinese food contamination.<\/p>\n In 2008, food and product safety issues that had been smoldering in China finally erupted in a rash of scandals, most having to do with melamine-tainting in food products such as milk, eggs, ammonium bicarbonate<\/a>, protein powder<\/a>, and animal feed<\/a>, but also including food poisoned<\/a> with pesticides, a maggot outbreak in oranges<\/a>, hazardous toys<\/a>, and toxic furniture<\/a>.
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