Chinese Alarmed by Discovery of Milk Spiked With Leather Protein

Chinese authorities are scrambling to calm the nation’s fears following reports of another discovery of contaminated milk.

As Reuters reported, Chinese state media outlets disclosed Thursday that some dairy producers were spiking their product with a leather protein. Although there have been no reports of illness, authorities worried that the disclosure would spark a new public outcry about the safety of the nation’s milk supply.

“Reports of the ‘leather milk’ incident will undoubtedly cause panic among citizens and cause another crisis of confidence for the dairy industry,” the official news agency Xinhua said in an editorial.

Authorities responded by saying that they had stepped up inspections on milk producers, and that offenders would be punished.

“Businesses that are found illegally producing and processing ‘leather milk’ should be severely dealt with,” said the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine in a prepared statement.

The sensitivity of the Chinese public to a milk-contamination scandal stems from a 2008 episode in which milk laced with melamine, a chemical used in plastics and other materials, sickened 300,000 children and killed at least six. Dairy producers added the melamine for the same apparent reason that, in the most recent incident, they mixed in the leather protein: to alter the nutritional content and slip by minimum-protein rules.

The Chinese government executed two of the officials blamed for the melamine incident and last month announced the arrest of 96 other people in connection with the scandal.

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