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China penalizes 113 in tainted pork scandal
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Nov 26, 2011


China penalized 113 people, including 17 government employees, over a chemical tainted pork scandal, official state media reported on Saturday.

The prime suspect, Liu Xiang, received the death sentence with two years' reprieve on conviction of harming public safety, China Daily said.

Liu's clandestine workshop producing a carcinogenic chemical clenbuterol, which is added to pig feed to produce leaner pork, was seized in Xiangyang city, Henan province in March.

Clenbutoral is banned as livestock feed, as it can cause nausea, dizziness, headaches and heart palpitations in human beings.

Liu's collaborator, Xi Zhongjie, was sentenced to life.

The government employees, including animal health and food safety inspectors, were handed jail sentences ranging from 3 to 9 years.

The 36 pig farmers received lighter sentences, ranging from probation to jail terms under a year.

In March, China Central Television (CCTV) reported that clenbuterol was detected in pigs bought by a subsidiary company of Shuanghui Group, China's largest meat processor.

The investigation revealed that from 2007 to March 2011 the two associates sold over 2,700 kilograms of clenbuterol to pork farmers across eight provinces in China, the official state media Xinhua reported.

Food scandals occur regularly in China, with recent cases involving recycled cooking oil, contaminated eggs and carcinogenic mushrooms.

To calm public opinion, Chinese authorities last year requested that the death sentence be applied in the most serious food scandal cases.

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FARM NEWS
China govt under fire over new food bacteria rule
Beijing (AFP) Nov 25, 2011
China's state-run media and web users criticised the government Friday after it ruled that small amounts of a potentially lethal bacterium were permissible in frozen food. The health ministry ruling followed a series of recalls of products, including dumplings made by Synear Food - one of China's largest frozen food producers - because they contained traces of staphylococcus aureus bacteri ... read more


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