Chinese government officials have announced that 248 people were arrested in 2010 for violations of food safety standards.
Still, officials sought to downplay concerns about the nation’s food safety, a long-running issue. According to a statement from the National Food Safety Regulating Work Office, “No major incident occurred last year, and the overall food safety situation maintained stable.”
The state news agency Xinhua said there were an estimated 130,000 food safety cases in China last year, resulting in 115 criminal complaints. Additionally, 191 government officials working in food safety were punished for poor food safety enforcement, with 26 of them fired.
The safety violations involved areas such as agricultural produce, catering and food exports.
One of the specific targets of the crackdown was “gutter oil,” in which kitchen waste is collected, refined and then reused, typically in small restaurants looking to cut costs.
Incidents involving pesticide-laden beans and lead in candy exported to the U.S. also came to light last year, as Food Safety News reported.
One of China’s most notorious food safety cases came in 2008. It involved milk tainted with melamine that killed at least six toddlers and sickened another 300,000.
But a parent of one of the stricken children who became an activist and called attention to the melamine-milk scandal was sentenced to two-and-a-half years in prison last year for inciting social disorder.
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