Chinese authorities have arrested 96 people since last summer for producing milk tainted with melamine, the same chemical that killed six children in 2008, sparking an international uproar.
The crackdown over the new episode of contamination began in July. Reuters, citing a report from the government media agency Xinhua, said milk samples from two remote northwest provinces were tested by the Chinese government and found to have more than 500 times the permitted level of melamine.
Seventeen of those arrested since last summer already have been convicted, with two sentenced to life in prison. Another 26 government officials have been fired. China also seized more than 2,000 tons of milk powder tainted with the chemical.
Melamine is typically used in the production of cement, fertilizer and plastic.
China’s sensitivity to tainted milk stems from the 2008 melamine contamination, which sickened 300,000 along with causing six deaths. Two officials have been executed in the wake of the incident.
At the same time, Chinese officials have reacted forcefully to domestic criticism over the 2008 milk scandal, recently sentencing a food-safety activist whose son was made ill by the melamine-laced milk to two-and-a-half years in prison for inciting social disorder.
Related Posts:
Deadly Milk Scandal Spurs New Scrutiny of Chinese Dairies
Chinese Activist Sent to Prison After Sounding Off About Tainted Milk


