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GFW开始屏蔽国外对中国的奶粉问题的报道了

作者madbird 标签报道 奶粉 三聚氰胺 三鹿 阅读次数:19

这个报道的链接,点击以后无法浏览内容,但是如果你使用国外代理登陆互联网,就可以浏览。这说明GFW开始屏蔽国外对中国的奶粉问题的报道了。

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080918/wl_nm/china_milk_dc

China formula scare spreads to ice-cream, yoghurt By Ian Ransom
40 minutes ago
 


BEIJING (Reuters) - Hong Kong has ordered the recall of a Chinese company's products after milk, ice cream and yogurt were found to be contaminated with melamine, the compound responsible for killing four children in a China health scandal.

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Tainted milk powder produced in China has made thousands ill, and triggered sackings and detentions and rocked public trust already battered by a litany of food safety scares involving tainted eggs, pork and seafood in recent years.

Now the scandal has spread to milk, ice-cream and yoghurt ice-bars. Hong Kong ordered the recall of a Chinese company's products on Thursday after tests found that eight of 30 of its products, including milk drinks, were tainted with melamine.

The company, Inner Mongolia Yili Industrial Group Co Ltd, was a Beijing Olympic Games sponsor and is one of 22 Chinese firms implicated in the scandal.

A regional Chinese health authority said on Thursday a fourth child had died at a hospital in remote northwestern Xinjiang. The report on the authority's website (www.xjwst.gov.cn) gave no further details.

Milk tainted with melamine, a compound banned in food, has killed three other babies, two in China's northwestern Gansu province and one in eastern Zhejiang.

The health scare erupted after Sanlu Group last week revealed it had produced and sold melamine-laced milk, and a subsequent probe found a fifth of 109 Chinese dairy producers made adulterated products with the substance.

At the latest count, 6,244 children have become ill with kidney stones after drinking powdered milk laced with melamine, with three deaths and 158 suffering "acute kidney failure."

"It's just a terrible situation, it's really scary," said a 34-year-old father surnamed Zhou, cradling one of his eight-month twins outside a Beijing children's hospital.

"You expect small brands to have quality issues, but these are big brands, name brands. The authorities need to improve their oversight," said Zhou, queuing to have his children examined.

SACKINGS

Local media have kept quiet about claims that Sanlu and officials in Shijiazhuang, where the company is based, concealed the poisonings from the public and senior authorities during the Beijing Olympics in August.

Sanlu is 43 percent owned by New Zealand dairy giant Fonterra, and New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark said on Monday that Chinese officials acted last week only after her government pressed Beijing.

A vice governor of Hebei, Yang Chongyong, said on Wednesday that Sanlu knew "long ago" that melamine was being used in its milk from as early as 2005, and that 41 of 372 milk stations supplying the company had been found to have problems.

Two Chinese dairy firms had also exported baby milk powder to Yemen, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Gabon and Burundi.

"Though there has been no bad reaction, the quality watchdog has demanded that these companies take action to recall the products," Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Jiang Yu told a regular news briefing on Thursday.

Bangladesh authorities were testing the imported formula, and South Korea had also stepped up checks on Chinese milk powder.

Melamine is rich in nitrogen, used to measure protein, and so can be used to disguise diluted milk. It can cause kidney stones and other organ problems.

China's State Council vowed to shake up the dairy industry, saying it faced widespread regulatory failings despite efforts to improve food safety, official newspapers reported.

The mayor of Shijiazhuang, the home city of Sanlu in north China's Hebei province, was sacked following the earlier dismissal of four subordinates.

Hebei police seized 222 kg of melamine and arrested 12 people on Thursday, Xinhua news agency said, bringing the total arrested in the scandal to 18. Six were melamine dealers and the others 12 dealers suspected of selling contaminated milk.

Another 10 have been detained including Sanlu's sacked chairwoman, Tian Wenhua, and authorities were hunting for another milk dealer at large.

(Editing by Nick Macfie and Jeremy Laurence)



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