China Nabs 900 over Rat and Other Meat Scandals

China Nabs 900 over Rat and Other Meat Scandals

(AFP) China has detained 900 people for meat-related crimes including selling rat and fox meat as beef and mutton, the public security ministry said, in another blow to the nation’s food safety.

News of the three-month operation added to a string of scandals that have galvanised public concern from recycled cooking oil to dangerous chemicals in baby milk powder.

Altogether there were “382 cases of water-injected meat, fake mutton and beef, diseased meat, toxic and harmful meat products”, the ministry said on its website on Thursday.

The crimes ranged from sellers in eastern Jiangsu province making fake mutton from fox, rat and chemicals, and others in southwestern Guizhou province mixing hydrogen peroxide solution with chicken claws.

The scandal became a hot topic among users of China’s popular Sina Weibo microblog, a service akin to Twitter.

The public security ministry said the sting was part of a wider probe into food safety issues, from the discovery in March of thousands of dead pigs floating down a Shanghai river to the problem of “gutter oil”.

Cheap recycled cooking oil is available nationwide made illegally from leftovers scooped out of restaurant drains.

One of China’s greatest food safety scandals hit in 2008 when the industrial chemical melamine was found to have been illegally added to dairy products, killing at least six babies and making 300,000 people ill.

In another recent incident, US fast food giant KFC was hit by controversy after revealing some Chinese suppliers provided chicken with high levels of antibiotics, in what appeared to be an industry-wide practice.

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