1 post tagged “yeah suuuuure”
by Nick Macfie and Guo Shipeng
Feb 28, 2008
BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese-made dumplings which made 10 people sick in Japan were sabotaged, most probably in Japan, China's security and quality watchdogs said on Thursday.
No one has died from the poisoned food but the case has prompted frenetic media coverage in Japan following a series of health scares over Chinese products ranging from pet food and toys to toothpaste.
"Chinese police have come to the conclusion that it was not a food safety incident caused by pesticide residues but a special case of sabotage," Yu Xinmin, a senior official with the Ministry of Public Security, told a news conference.
"After comprehensive, careful investigation and tests, we believe there is little chance that methamidophos (a pesticide) was put into dumplings in China," said Yu, deputy director of the ministry's criminal investigation bureau.
Japanese police have said that it was highly unlikely that the sabotage happened in Japan, citing the fact that methamidophos was strictly banned there and the packages of some of the problematic dumplings remained intact.
But Yu said Chinese tests showed that the pesticide could have seeped into the dumplings from outside the package, contrary to the results from similar tests by Japanese police, and suggested that the methamidophos could have been shipped into Japan from abroad.
Police questioned 55 people at the Chinese producer in the northern province of Hebei who might have been able to taint the dumplings but they were all cleared of suspicion, Yu said.
Japanese and Chinese investigators earlier said the plant was "very clean and well-managed", finding no harmful chemicals in samples and no abnormal operations.
No problems were detected either from the factory gate to Japanese ports, Yu said, adding that he was sorry Japanese police had not given his colleagues consistent cooperation and had released inconclusive investigation results to the media.
Yu said Chinese police would continue to work with their Japanese counterparts to find out the truth.
The poisoning is a delicate matter for Sino-Japanese ties, sensitive at the best of times over Japanese wartime atrocities in China.
China had taken "resolute" actions to investigate the incident in a responsible manner, Wei Chuanzhong, vice head of the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine, told the same news conference.
"It's because we don't want an isolated incident to affect the overall interests of bilateral relations and hurt the friendship between the two peoples," Wei said.
"We might have become a bit hypersensitive after the dumpling incident...we should return to a rational and normal thinking and not be misled by mistaken information."