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FDA Alert: Detention of Chinese Imports
- By Susan Thixton
- Published 11/12/2008
- Pet Food Recall
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The FDA issued an import alert, 11/12/08, detaining ALL milk products, milk derived ingredients and finished food products containing milk from China due to the presence of melamine. Close to two years after melamine tainted wheat, rice, and corn protein additives began to make thousands of pets sick across the US, the chemical continues to make news around the world; bad news.
All milk products, all milk derived ingredients, and all finished food products containing milk imported from China are being detained without physical examination – nationwide. Many types of human foods from bakery products, cereals, cheese, ice cream, soft drinks and candy are being detained for testing. ALSO pet foods; the alert list of pet products includes: pet cat foods, pet dog foods, pet fish foods, other pet foods, laboratory animal feeds, pet and laboratory animal foods, byproducts for animals, dairy byproducts for animals, and animal waste feed products imported from China. This alert WOULD include milk derived pet food ingredients shipped to the U.S. from China. http://www.fda.gov/ora/fiars/ora_import_ia9930.html
The FDA alert states although the melamine milk contamination started in infant formula, “these contaminated milk components appear to have been dispersed throughout the Chinese food supply chain.” The FDA has detected melamine and cyanuric acid in a number of milk products including candy and beverages. “In addition, information received from government sources in a number of countries indicates a wide range and variety of products from a variety of manufacturers have been manufactured using melamine-contaminated milk or milk-derived ingredients,…” “Reports of contamination have come from more than thirteen countries in Asia, Europe, and Australia, in addition to the United States.”
Time Magazine online reported on 11/4/08 that the Chinese government continues to downgrade the severity of the melamine problem. http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1856168,00.html. Melamine tainted pet food in 2007; baby formulas, candy, and fish feed to mention a few in 2008. Experts state “If those lessons don’t sink in, then expect a Chinese Product Safety Scandal of 2009.”
The Epoch Times, a world-wide newspaper reported on November 6, 2008 of Lin He, a geneticist and member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences speech to the Summit Medical Academy; believing melamine contaminated foods to be “one of the most important factors resulting in the soaring number of birth defects in China.”
http://en.epochtimes.com/n2/china/melamine-birth-defects-6811.html
Not melamine related, but China related: Also on November 6, 2008, the FDA announced it seized 11 lots of contaminated heparin from Celsus Laboratories in Cincinnati, Ohio; all imported from China. The FDA has notified Japanese, Canadian, Australian, European Union, and other international authorities of shipments of contaminated heparin from Celsus.
The Ministry of Consumer Affairs in Trinidad & Tobago posted a full page advertisement in the Sunday November 9, 2008 newspaper warning consumers about food products from China and Japan. “The ad mentioned ham and sausages manufactured by Itoham Foods were under suspicion of Cyanide contamination. In addition, it noted that Nissin Cup Noodles, manufactured by Nissin Food Products Co., was suspected of being tainted with Melamine, the industrial chemical at the heart of the Chinese milk scandal.” http://www.antiguasun.com/paper/?as=view&sun=241044046411102008&an=465042039011102008&ac=Local
Hong Kong reported on November 12, 2008 “food inspectors have found fish feed imported from China contaminated with high levels of melamine.” http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/11/12/asia/13chinafood.php
The threat of melamine continues worldwide. Consumers are left with few options to protect their families from contaminated Chinese imports. While it’s only a partial help, the UPC or Bar Code number listed on product labels gives consumers limited Country of Origin information. The first three digits of a bar code indicates the location country of the company which produces the product; not necessarily the country where the product was manufactured. As an example, products that are manufactured by a Chinese company in China have a bar code that begins with 690 thru 695. However, a US company whose products are manufactured in China would have a bar code that begins with 000 – 019; the codes for the US and Canada. The first three digits of the bar code number indicate the country location of the company headquarters. Also, foods that would contain ingredients from China would not be noted by the bar code. Wikipedia provides the following list of Country Codes: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_GS1_country_codes.
Wishing you and your pet the best,
Susan Thixton
Truth about Pet Food
Petsumer Report
www.TruthaboutPetFood.com
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1 Response to "FDA Alert: Detention of Chinese Imports" 
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said this on 13 Nov 2008 1:47:05 PM EDT
Great information. Thank
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