31 More Batches Of Chinese Milk Tainted
Beijing Says Chemical Melamine Found In More Food Products, Widening Global Scandal
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A worker is seen at a milk processing factory in Chengdu, southwest China's Sichuan province, Sept. 28, 2008. (AP Photo/Color China Photo)
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The contamination has been blamed for the deaths of four children and kidney ailments among 54,000 others. More than 13,000 children have been hospitalized and 27 people arrested in connection with the tainting.
The new figure, seen on the food safety administration's Web site, brings to at least 100 the number of tested batches of milk powder found to contain melamine. A previous round of testing, results of which were posted on Sept. 16, found melamine in 69 milk powder batches. Dozens of brands sold by more than a score of dairy firms, including some of China's biggest names, have been among those tested.
Tests have also found melamine in 24 batches of liquid milk produced by three of the country's best known dairy firms.
It was a national holiday in China and product safety officials could not be reached for comment.
The Web site quoted the State Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine as saying it had tested 265 batches produced by 154 different companies prior to Sept. 14. China has a total of 290 companies making powdered milk, the administration said.
In the most recent tests, nine of the batches containing melamine were produced by the company at the center of the scandal, Sanlu, a 43 percent stake of which is owned by New Zealand dairy cooperative Fonterra. No date for the testing was given.
Melamine, which is high in nitrogen, is used to make plastics and fertilizers and experts say some amount of the chemical may be transferred from the environment during food processing. But in China's case, suppliers trying to boost output are believed to have diluted their milk, adding melamine because its nitrogen content can fool tests aimed at verifying protein content.
Melamine can cause kidney stones, leading to kidney failure. Infants are particularly vulnerable.
Levels of melamine discovered in batches tested varied widely, from as much as 6,196 milligrams per kilogram to as little 1.3 milligrams per kilogram. Chinese health officials have said no harm comes from consuming less than 0.63 milligrams per kilogram.
The scandal was worsened by an apparent cover-up by companies involved and the ignoring by safety officials of tips and warnings from parents and doctors. Top Sanlu executives and government officials in the northern city of Shijiazhuang, where the company is based, have been forced to resign.
Also on Wednesday, Hong Kong's food safety agency said its tests have found melamine in a Japanese brand's Chinese-made cheesecake.
The Centre for Food Safety said a sample of Lotte Cream Cheese Cake manufactured by Japan's Lotte China Foods Co. Ltd in mainland China was found to contain melamine.
Hong Kong and Macau authorities earlier detected excessive melamine in Lotte's popular Koala's March chocolate and strawberry cream cookies.
By Associated Press Writer Dikky Sinn
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.



Step 1, DONT go to China
Step 2, If you MUST go to China, DONT drink the milk!!!
Problem solved...
next?
Chill out, BlackY, we dont buy any milk from China. Its illegal to import dairy products from China...take a pill
They are smuggling the milk in through the chocolate bars.
If Americans are rich enough to afford to buy products made in Europe and China,your iders may be good.But USA need China''s money to consume wastefully.Plus,Americans'' pockets are getting wizened,especially when finance tsunami is soaring.Despite the country''s inexperience in the financial sector, China has a rare trump card: mountains of cash.China''s big banks have escaped the credit catastrophe largely unscathed, and the economy continues to expand briskly.
Lead Toys, bad prescriptions, sick milk .. I think it is time to rethink our reliance on China for our products.
I correct here. "If Americans are rich enough to afford to buy products made in Europe and USA,Credibility2''s ideas may be good".
abs-cbnNEWS.com | 09/23/2008 11:11 AM
The Bureau of Food and Drugs has banned the import and sale of Chinese milk products due to the melamine contamination crisis.
%u201C...in the interest of protecting public health and welfare, directing all licensed importers and/or distributors of registered milk products sourced from China to immediately stop temporarily from further importing distributing, selling and offering for sale the aforesaid products,%u201D said BFAD in an advisory dated September 22.
Also note the label doesn''t have to say made in China if it is processed cooked, or combined with another product. Heck their lobbyist must be as good as the banks''.
This is ridiculous how this just keeps going on and on- if these morons are misusing this stuff they are buying it from somewhere- time to clamp down on the manufacturers of it.
It doesn''t matter whether it says it was "made in the USA or not. The "ingredients" can come from wherever, and as long as it was "put together" in the U.S., they can say it was "made in the U.S.".
It doesn''''t matter whether it says it was "made in the USA or not. The "ingredients" can come from wherever, and as long as it was "put together" in the U.S., they can say it was "made in the U.S.".
Posted by erasmus81 at 01:50 PM : Oct 01, 2008
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I agree, There really is no way to know where stuff we eat comes from. It is a d a m n shame that we have to be exposed to this poison.
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by lovesamerica
October 1, 2008 8:22 PM EDT
- But it''s cheaper right?
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