BEIJING, Sept. 19, 2008

China Tainted Milk Scandal Widens

Melamine Found In China's 3 Leading Dairies; Singapore Bans Dairy Imports

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    A Chinese doctor examines a baby who was fed with Sanlu milk powder.  (Imaginechina via AP Images)

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(AP)  China's tainted milk crisis widened Friday after tests found the industrial chemical melamine in liquid milk produced by three of the country's leading dairy companies, the quality watchdog said.

Singapore suspended the sale and import of all Chinese milk and dairy products because several tested items were contaminated.

Tainted baby formula has been blamed for killing four infants and sickening 6,200 in China since the scandal broke last week. Some 1,300 babies, mostly newborns, are currently in hospitals and 158 of them are suffering from acute kidney failure. Thousands of parents across the country were bringing their children to hospitals for health checks.

The crisis was initially thought to have been confined to tainted milk powder. But about 10 percent of liquid milk samples taken from Mengniu Dairy Group Co. and Yili Industrial Group Co. — China's two largest dairy producers — contained melamine, according to the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine. Milk from Shanghai-based Bright Dairy also showed contamination.

Singapore's Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority said tests revealed traces of melamine in samples of a Yili-brand yogurt bar and Dutch Lady-brand strawberry milk manufactured in China. Authorities said they plan to destroy all samples of these two products in Singapore. Officials also warned local food manufacturers against using milk products from China as ingredients.

Hong Kong's two biggest grocery chains, PARKnSHOP and Wellcome, pulled all liquid milk by Mengniu from shelves Friday. A day earlier, Hong Kong had recalled milk, yogurt, ice cream and other products made by Yili Industrial Group Co.

Starbucks Corp. said its 300 cafes in mainland China had pulled milk supplied by Mengniu. Seattle-based Starbucks said no employees or customers had fallen ill from the milk.

SingaporeThe scandal began with complaints over milk powder by Sanlu Group Co. — one of China's best-known and most respected brands. But it quickly became a much larger problem as government tests found that one-fifth of the companies producing baby milk powder had melamine in their products.

Melamine is a toxic industrial chemical that can cause kidney stones and lead to kidney failure. It has no nutritional value but is high in nitrogen, making products with it appear higher in protein. Suppliers trying to cut costs are believed to have added it to watered-down milk to cover up the resulting protein deficiency.

The scandal is the latest in a series of problems with tainted products made in China. The crisis has raised doubts about the effectiveness of tighter controls China promised after a series of food safety scares in recent years over contaminated seafood, toothpaste and a pet food ingredient tainted with melamine.

Though most of the suspect dairy products are only sold domestically, two of the companies involved exported baby formula to five countries in Asia and Africa. Other products such as milk, yogurt and ice cream went to Hong Kong.

Two distributors said Friday that Sanlu ordered them to pull its baby formula off store shelves in early July, weeks before the company went public with the melamine contamination.

The statements by the distributors in Hebei province, where Sanlu is headquartered, raise further questions about when the company and government knew milk powder being fed to babies was tainted with a banned chemical.

A New Zealand stakeholder in Sanlu has said it was told in early August, before the start of the Beijing Olympics on Aug. 8, that there was a problem. The dairy farmers' group Fonterra, which owns 43 percent of Sanlu Group, told the New Zealand government, which informed Chinese officials.

The public was not told until Sept. 11 that the powder, used in baby formula and other products, was laced with melamine.

"We were asked by Sanlu to take all their 2007 to July 2008 baby powder off the shelves in early July" and replace it with new powder, said one of the distributors, Zhang Youqiang.

"Then things got weird. In early August, they came to us again and said all the new Sanlu baby milk powder we had just put on the shelves" did not meet a certain government standard unrelated to product quality, said Zhang, who declined to give his company name for fear of offending Sanlu. He said it was not clear what the standard was that had not been met.

Zhang said he now has warehouses full of contaminated milk powder and is trying to get refunds from Sanlu.

Another distributor, Liang Jianqiang, said he was also trying to get money from Sanlu. He also took Sanlu baby milk powder out of stores in July.

"They told me there would be a new formula that's better quality. They did this again in August and September," he said. Liang also did not want to disclose the name of his company.

Phone calls to Sanlu rang unanswered Friday and its Web site was not working. China's quality watchdog did not respond after asking to be sent a fax with questions.

The quality watchdog said it intended to "severely punish those who are responsible," according to a notice posted on the agency's Web site. It said all the batches that tested positive were being recalled.


©MMVIII, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Add a Comment See all 14 Comments
by gangesdak September 19, 2008 12:24 PM PDT
Firing squad is the answer. Chinese law allows for it. Chinese buddies, go do it.
Reply to this comment
by thevicar1 September 19, 2008 12:58 PM PDT
Believe it or not, Mr. China, there are actually people in America who think that Government Regulation is a BAD THING. We call them Ultra-Left-Wing Liber-Brats!

Of course, Mr. China, you appearantly have no such concerns regarding your Government Regulating how much gunk and garbage gets put into you baby milk, do you?
Reply to this comment
by slokipoki September 19, 2008 1:04 PM PDT
When are we going to wake up to China? They not only own us because of our debt to them they are poisoning with their food and toys. They are slowly killing us without going to war.
Reply to this comment
by pollroller1 September 19, 2008 1:18 PM PDT
What gets me is that we have plenty of capacity to produce milk right here in the USA. I just don''t understand why they have to bring milk over here from China.
Reply to this comment
by thevicar1 September 19, 2008 1:48 PM PDT
What gets me is that we have plenty of capacity to produce milk right here in the USA. I just dont understand why they have to bring milk over here from China ---------------------------------------------------------- Posted by pollroller1


What on earth are you talking about?
Reply to this comment
by lewiston14 September 19, 2008 1:55 PM PDT
pollroller1: I do not think any of the products in question made their way here to the US. They were sold to some other Asian countries.

I could be wrong but that is what the story read.
Reply to this comment
by hbevis September 19, 2008 2:38 PM PDT
This is just another case of an emerging Country that has not caught up with Quality. This will go on until people start dieing and then maybe something will get done.

China is still a Commi... Country and the leaders think that they know all..... It reminds me of OUR BUNCH IN WASHINGTON SOMETIMES.
Reply to this comment
by soldat44 September 19, 2008 3:58 PM PDT
pollroller1: I do not think any of the products in question made their way here to the US. They were sold to some other Asian countries.

I could be wrong but that is what the story read.

Posted by lewiston14 at 01:55 PM : Sep 19, 2008

Nowhere in the article does it state that any of this milk product was shipped to the USA.
Reply to this comment
by soldat44 September 19, 2008 3:59 PM PDT
What gets me is that we have plenty of capacity to produce milk right here in the USA. I just don''''t understand why they have to bring milk over here from China.

Posted by pollroller1 at 01:18 PM : Sep 19, 2008

Did you read the article? Nowhere does it state that ANY of these milk products were sold and shipped to the USA.


Reply to this comment
by painslapme September 19, 2008 6:08 PM PDT
SROO SRORRY!!

HA-HA-HA-HA
Reply to this comment
by jw218389 September 19, 2008 9:02 PM PDT
Wait a minute!!!

Are you suggesting that FOOD FROM CHINA IS UNSAFE!!??

Wow - hard to believe after the LEAD COATED TOYS, THE HEPARIN MADE FROM DOG BLOOD, and the DOG FOOD WITH RAT POISON IN IT!!!!

You must be kidding.... FOOD FROM CHINA ISN''T SAFE????

Any country that will run its college students over with tanks, censor Olympic atheletes, and try to kill the Dali Lama must be completly trust worthy....

CHINA WILL DESTROY THE FREE WORLD AND JOHN McCAIN WILL MARCH IN GOOSE STEP WITH THEM!!!

GOD BLESS AMERICA AND SAVE US FROM JOHN McCAIN!!!

Reply to this comment
by pollroller1 September 19, 2008 9:19 PM PDT
I stand corrected. I don''t where I got that they were sending the milk over here.
Reply to this comment
by toomanypotho September 21, 2008 6:44 PM PDT
I don''t get it. Who is Mr.China? And why can''t these people breastfeed? That would solve the baby milk problem.
Reply to this comment
by Meg003 September 21, 2008 10:32 PM PDT
Pollroller1
You are correct. Check this article http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/09/19/health/main4462034.shtml for the following sentences:

The Food and Drug Administration has widened its inspections at ports of entry to focus on shipments of bulk food ingredients from Asia that are derived from milk, such as milk concentrate and whole milk powder.

Clearly, though incomprehensibly, we are importing milk products. Incidentally, part of our apple juice is also being imported from China.
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