| Re-printed from CTV
Globemedia Thursday April 26, 2007
© 2007 CTV Globemedia
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China bans melamine in food but rejects pet link
Associated Press
Updated: Thu. Apr. 26 2007 7:05 AM ET
BEIJING - China said Thursday it has banned
melamine from food products after the chemical was found in exports of
vegetable protein shipped to the United States, but rejected it as the
cause of dozens of pet deaths in North America.
U.S. Food and Drug Administration officials
say they suspect the substance, which is a chemical found in plastics
and pesticides, is to blame.
China's Foreign Ministry said in a statement
there was no evidence to support the FDA's claim but that it would co-operate
with the United States to find out what actually killed the animals.
The comments in a statement released by
the Chinese Foreign Ministry were the first detailed response from Beijing
to concerns that emerged a month ago about the country's wheat and rice
gluten exports.
China has said it was investigating the
issue but had not acknowledged until Thursday that Chinese companies had
shipped gluten tainted with melamine to the United States.
The ministry said the contaminated vegetable
protein managed to get past customs without inspection because it had
not been declared for use in pet food.
"At present, there is no clear evidence
showing that melamine is the direct cause of the poisoning or death of
the pets,'' the statement said. "China is willing to strengthen co-operation
with the U.S. side ... to find out the real cause leading to the pet deaths
in order to protect the health of the pets of the two countries.''
U.S. Food and Drug Administration officials
have said they suspect Chinese wheat and rice gluten laced with melamine
and added to pet food may have killed at least 15 cats and dogs. The chemical
appears to have caused acute kidney failure in animals that have died
or been sickened after eating foods contaminated with the chemical.
China said an investigation triggered by
FDA complaints found melamine in wheat and rice gluten exported to the
United States by two Chinese companies: Xuzhou Anying Bio-technology Development
Company and Binzhou Futian Bio-technology Company.
The case has prompted China to step up
inspections of plant-based proteins and to list melamine as a banned substance
for food exports and domestic sales, it said.
China also invited FDA officials to visit
China to help with further investigations into the case and to consult
on improving inspection techniques, it said.
Last month, Toronto-area Menu Foods Income
Fund recalled 60 million cans and pouches of its "cuts and gravy''
style food, sold under 95 different brand names, after it received reports
of kidney failure and even death among dogs and cats.
The Canadian division of French pet food
company Royal Canin last week recalled five of its veterinary diet products.
It also cut its ties with Chinese suppliers of vegetable proteins after
finding out the rice gluten was contaminated with melamine.
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