Medical and Hospital News  
FARM NEWS
Global fears rise over German meat

by Staff Writers
Berlin (AFP) Jan 8, 2011
Global fears mounted on Saturday over the safety of German meat due to contaminated animal feed, with South Korea banning pork imports and Slovakia suspending poultry sales.

As the European Union insisted there was no need for a ban, Germany moved to calm the concerns over food safety with test results showing acceptable levels of dioxin, a potentially cancer-causing chemical compound, in poultry and meat.

The European Commission said South Korea had become the first country to suspend imports of German pork and accused Seoul of overreacting.

"It is a decision which is out of proportion as to what is going on in Germany, but we are going to try to talk with the South Koreans to reassure them," said Frederic Vincent, spokesman for European health commissioner John Dalli.

Brussels does not consider there are grounds for declaring a ban on exports of German meat or other products from Germany "because the farms have been closed and farm products which have been delivered are blocked, awaiting analysis," Vincent said.

Slovakia became the first EU country to impose restrictions on German meat, after it suspended sales of poultry meat and eggs while it conducted tests to assess dioxin levels.

"The agriculture ministry has ordered checks in shops and warehouses in response to the discovery of dioxins in certain foods," the Slovak ministry said in a statement.

"Pending the results of laboratory tests, the sale of eggs and poultry imported from Germany will be temporarily suspended," it said.

Russia's agriculture watchdog said it had stepped up controls on food of animal origin from Germany and also from other EU countries although it did not specify which ones fell under the tougher regime.

The watchdog also warned that Russia could ban meat imports if it did not receive official information on the situation.

"The European Union still lacks a system to react urgently to cases that could be dangerous for animals and humans," the watchdog's spokesman Alexei Alexeyenko told the Interfax news agency.

Germany shut down 4,700 farms to check for dangerous levels of dioxin and destroyed more than 100,000 eggs.

By Saturday, around 500 dairy farms had been reopened in Lower Saxony and North Rhine-Westphalia, and more would be reopened through the weekend, Germany's agricultural confederation said in a statement.

The firm at the centre of the crisis, Harles und Jentzsch in the northern state of Schleswig-Holstein, is alleged to have supplied up to 3,000 tonnes of contaminated fatty acids meant only for industrial use to around 25 animal feed makers.

Most of this -- 2,500 tonnes -- was delivered in November and December to animal feed producers in Lower Saxony, where it was used in fodder.

The German agriculture ministry moved to curb fears of contaminated food supplies by announcing that three tests in abattoirs of poultry due to be distributed showed dioxin levels that were "well below the authorised limit".

Six other tests on pork showed dioxin levels were in line with acceptable levels, it said.

Pressure mounted on Harles und Jentzsch, which has been accused of fraud and tax evasion in addition to possibly breaking health regulations.

"Lots of things lead us to think that the company cheated its clients and transformed fatty acids into low-quality feed for livestock," an agriculture ministry spokesman in Lower Saxony told a local newspaper.

The crisis moved swiftly beyond Germany's borders, with some 136,000 eggs from a suspect German farm exported at the beginning of December to the Netherlands and the European Commission saying tainted eggs may also have been imported to Britain.

The Netherlands and Britain have both played down the public health risk.

burs/cg/mm



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Farming Today - Suppliers and Technology



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


FARM NEWS
Germany closes 4,700 farms as dioxin crisis widens
Berlin (AFP) Jan 7, 2011
German officials said Friday they had shut 4,700 farms and destroyed more than 100,000 eggs, as a widening crisis over tainted animal feed rocked the country, with authorities suspecting illegal activity. A spokesman for German Agriculture Minister Ilse Aigner told a regular news conference: "4,709 farms and businesses are currently closed," including 4,468 in the state of Lower Saxony, nort ... read more







FARM NEWS
Time for aid groups to 'step aside' in Haiti: MSF

Aid group says Haiti rebuilding effort too slow

In Haiti, empty tombs but no resurrection

'Noah's Ark' refuge for Australia's flood-hit animals

FARM NEWS
GPSCaddy Golf App Now Offers Free Course Maps

ISRO To Implement Regional Navigation Satellite System

Networks Of Up To 2 Million Cells Now Supported By GeoLENs Location Platform

Software Will Take Half Of The Total Nav Market By 2016

FARM NEWS
Impact Of Traffic Noise On Sleep Patterns

Humans First Wore Clothes 170,000 Years Ago

Publication of ESP study causes furor

Biological Joints Could Replace Artificial Joints Soon

FARM NEWS
Constructing Synthetic Proteins That Sustain Life

Ammonites Dined On Plankton

Wildflower Colors Tell Butterflies How To Do Their Jobs

Ammonites Last Meal: New Light On Past Marine Food Chains

FARM NEWS
Swine flu survivors offer clues to new vaccine

S. Korea battles renewed spread of bird flu, foot-and-mouth

Sales of Roche's Tamiflu fall in late 2010

Response to Haiti cholera fund 'shameful': UN

FARM NEWS
Beijing's 'mice' scurry for shelter from high costs

China expels drug safety official from party: report

China TV channel turns back clock with 'red' programming

Tiananmen leaders plead to attend democracy icon's funeral

FARM NEWS
Australian navy thwarts pirate attack on British ship

Danish ship disarms, detains pirates in Gulf of Aden: navy

Pirates: Ship released, another taken

Guns to fight Somali pirates seized in S.Africa: police

FARM NEWS
Walker's World: Euro train wreck

Study Finds Energy Limits Global Economic Growth

Floods set to clip Australian growth

Political Responses To Economic Challenges In The Next Decade


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement