Substandard food excluded from China
Updated: 2013-05-06 15:07
By Wang Xiaodong (chinadaily.com.cn)
|
|||||||||||
A total of 2,499 batches of substandard imported food were stopped from entering China last year, according to the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine.
In March this year, entry-exit inspection and quarantine authorities also stopped 156 batches of unsafe food from 28 countries and regions from entering the domestic market, People’s Daily reported on Monday.
Substandard overseas food stopped from entering China covered a wide range, including frozen squid from Spain with excessive levels of cadmium, crab powder from Norway that was found to contain excessive arsenic, tea from Germany with excessive levels of rare earth elements and sugar products from Ireland containing banned chemicals.
Famous international brands were also found with problems, such as Heinz and Beingmate, whose baby food supplements sold in China were found to contain excessive levels of mercury, the newspaper reported.
Related Stories
Bottled water scandal highlights food safety challenges 2013-04-17 11:02
New Zealand standards firm mulls food safety center with Chinese food giants 2013-04-12 10:19
High hopes for new food safety monitoring 2013-03-15 09:05
New department devoted to food safety 2013-03-05 10:53
Food safety standard set to be on menu next year 2012-10-03 17:44
Today's Top News
Renewed interest in mission to Mars
Suspects accused of selling tainted pork
Xi pins hope on youth for innovation, advancement
China playing bigger role in Middle East
FM wraps up tour on
note of stability
Museum window vandalized
Seawater can save thirsty country
New markets buy big at trade fair
Hot Topics
Lunar probe , China growth forecasts, Emission rules get tougher, China seen through 'colored lens', International board,
Editor's Picks
Education: Best days of our lives? |
Property prices continue to rise |
Recalling pain from horror |
Reality TV: Battle heating up |
Talent scouts must find, and also keep |
Rebuilding lives after quake |