Home Subscribe Print Edition Advertise National Editions Other Languages
Features

Advertisement

Printer version | E-Mail article | Give feedback

Japan Firm Recalls China Dumplings After 10 Fall Ill

Reuters
Jan 30, 2008

Japan Tabacco executive Mutsuo Iwai shows a paper at a press conference in Tokyo January 30, 2008 as he announced that their customers have fallen ill in Japan after eating dumplings, imported from China that contained insecticide. (Yoshikazu Tsuno/AFP/Getty Images)


Toxic Chinese Dumplings
(Exclusive NTDTV Video)

TOKYO—A Japanese food distributor recalled dumplings contaminated with pesticide on Wednesday after 10 people who ate them fell ill with vomiting and diarrhoea, in the latest safety scare involving Chinese products.

Japan Tobacco Inc said its subsidiary, JT Foods Co., would recall the frozen dumplings and other food made at the same Chinese factory, as television broadcasters flashed warnings to viewers not to eat the products.

"If anyone has the product, we ask you not to eat it and to send it back to us," Mutsuo Iwai, Japan Tobacco's executive vice president, told a news conference which some television broadcasters aired live.

A family of five that ate the dumplings was still in hospital, including a five-year-old girl who had at one point been in critical condition, a Health Ministry official said.

China was hit by a series of food safety scares last year, though officials have said they are adopting new technology and tighter laws to try to ensure safe food both at home and in exports.

Police found pesticide in the dumplings though it was not clear whether the dish, popular with children, had been contaminated with the chemicals in China or in Japan, the official said.

"We have sent information to China and we are asking for their cooperation in investigating the situation," he said.

A spokeswoman for Japan Tobacco, the world's third-largest cigarette maker, declined to comment on how the recall would impact on its food business, which accounts for only about 5 percent of the company's sales.

The former state monopoly has been trying to reduce its dependence on domestic tobacco sales and sees its food business as one driver of future growth.


For a complete report on contaminated Chinese imports, please see: Tainted Products From China



Advertisement