السبت، 23 فبراير 2013

Give horsemeat-tainted food to poor - German minister



Food product being tested for traces of horse DNA in Berlin (file)Although horsemeat poses little or no health risk, the discoveries have damaged consumer confidence
Germany's development minister has suggested that horsemeat mislabelled as beef should be distributed to the poor.
Dirk Niebel said he supported the proposal by a member of the governing CDU party, and concluded: "We can't just throw away good food."
The opposition dismissed the idea, but a priest said it should be considered.
Meanwhile, traces of horse DNA have been found in six tonnes of minced beef and 2,400 packs of lasagne Bolognese seized from a company in Italy.
Dirk Niebel said it would be irresponsible to throw away palatable and safe food
The products were packaged by Italian group Primia, based near Bologna.
The health ministry said Primia had used meat from another company in Brescia and originally supplied by two other companies, also based there.
It is the first positive test in Italy since the scandal erupted last month.
Earlier, the Italian authorities said they had found no traces of horsemeat in beef products seized this week from the Swiss food giant Nestle.

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To throw away food that could be consumed without risk is equally bad as false labelling and cannot be a solution”
Prelate Bernhard FelmbergEvangelical Church in Germany (EKD)
The health ministry said the 26 tonnes of cooked and frozen mince beef meals would be returned.
On Monday, Nestle announced that it was withdrawing two types of beef pasta meals from supermarkets in Italy and Spain after test revealed traces of horse DNA.
A problem was identified with a supplier in Germany, H J Schypke, it said.
Another German supplier, Dreistem, has been blamed for recalls of tinned goulash sold by the retailer Lidl in Germany and Scandinavia, while a third, Vossko, has been accused by Liechtenstein's Hiclona of using horsemeat in a pasta product withdrawn in Austria and Germany.
All three companies have blamed their own suppliers.
On Friday, Germany's consumer affairs ministry announced that it had now found traces of horse DNA in 67 of 830 food products tested.

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