China rushes to protect food safety by holding 312 tonnes of Irish pork

Finally some good news that will make anyone in China rest assured that the food on our table is safe. The General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine (AQSIQ) continues to be busy at work ensuring food safety for us all. After banning soy sauce and wasabi imported from three Japanese producers found to be tainted with toluene and ethyl acetate last month, AQSIQ has now withheld about 312 tonnes of Irish pork across the country, on global concerns that pork from Ireland contain potentially harmful levels of the cancer-causing agent dioxin. Even as many other countries are starting to ban Irish pork, this latest move by AQSIQ will hurt the Irish pork industry big time as China is a HUGE pork-consuming nation. Between September and now, China imported 2,047 tonnes of pork from Ireland.

Anyhow, it's been a while since the blue-ear disease struck, so eat Chinese pork, y'all.

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Comments (3) [rss]

user-pic

Well, rules apply to everyone.

I haven't seen that much bad Irish pork since I was in Boston!

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