Nestle removes beef pasta meals after finding horsemeat

Description: Nestle office

Nestle, the world's biggest food company, has removed beef pasta meals from
shelves in Italy and Spain after tests revealed traces of horse DNA.

The Swiss-based firm has halted deliveries of products containing meat from
a German supplier.

Nestle is the latest in a string of major food producers to find traces of
horsemeat in beef meals.

A spokesman for the company said levels of horse DNA were very low but above
1%.

Last week the firm said its products did not contain horsemeat.

Nestle withdrew two chilled pasta products, Buitoni Beef Ravioli and Beef
Tortellini, in Italy and Spain.

Lasagnes a la Bolognaise Gourmandes, a frozen product for catering
businesses produced in France, will also be withdrawn.

A spokesman for the company told the BBC that Nestle had identified a
problem with a supplier from Germany. 

'New tests' 

A statement on the Nestle website
<http://www.nestle.com/media/statements/supplier-mislabeled-beef-horse-meat>
identified the supplier as HJ Schypke, a sub-contractor of JBS Toledo, a
major meat processing company based in Belgium.

"There is no food safety issue, but the mislabelling of products means they
fail to meet the very high standards consumers expect from us," the
statement said.

In addition to removing the three affected products from sale, Nestle would
be "enhancing our existing comprehensive quality assurance programme by
adding new tests on beef for horse DNA prior to production in Europe", it
added. 


Meat scandal


*       In mid-January, Irish food inspectors announced they had found
horsemeat in some burgers stocked by UK supermarket chains
*       Subsequently, up to 100% horsemeat found in several ranges of
prepared frozen food in Britain, France and Sweden
*       Concerns that a drug used to treat horses, and which may be harmful
to humans, could be in food chain
*       Meat traced from France through Cyprus and The Netherlands to
Romanian abattoirs
*       Investigation suggests adulteration was not accidental but the work
of a criminal conspiracy

The BBC's Imogen Foulkes in Geneva says the news that the world's biggest
food producer is now having to withdraw some foods, shows the problem is far
wider than previously thought and, critics say, how dangerously unregulated
the food industry has become. 

The widening scandal over mislabelled horsemeat has affected at least 12
European countries, including Switzerland, where the retailer Co-op - famous
for its broad range of organic, locally-sourced food - was on Monday forced
to remove nine different products from its shelves.

Last Wednesday, the company said it had found horsemeat in its own-brand
frozen lasagne produced by the Comigel food processing company in France.

Co-op now faces possible charges of negligence from the Swiss authorities. 

France meanwhile partially lifted a production ban for another meat
processing firm, Spanghero.

The French government revoked its licence last week over suspicions that
Spanghero knowingly sold horsemeat labelled as beef, an allegation the
company rejects.

The French authorities said that unwitting workers should not be penalised.

As a result the firm will be allowed to produce minced meat, sausages and
ready-to-eat meals, but not to stock frozen meat.

Meanwhile the UK and Germany have also both pledged to step up testing of
frozen food products.

 

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           Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
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