China's customs has named
Hong Kong as a transit point for frozen meat smuggled into the mainland in
2009. Photo: Dickson Lee
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China's customs has named Hong Kong as a transit point for
frozen meat smuggled into the mainland, having netted more than 3 billion yuan
(HK$3.8 billion) worth of illegal frozen chicken, beef and pork - some of it up
to four decades old.
In the most recent
operation, officers in Changsha, Hunan province, found 800 tonnes of smuggled
frozen meat worth 10 million yuan - including beef, chicken feet and duck necks
- at a local wholesale market on June 1, Xinhua reported.
The meat found in
Changsha had been shipped to Hong Kong in containers before being packed
together and sent on to Vietnam's northern seaport of Haiphong. The meat was
then broken up into smaller consignments at the border city of Mong Cai before
being smuggled into China.
South China Morning Post report continues:
After arriving in
Changsha, the meat had been destined for dissemination to other parts of China,
such as Guangdong, Sichuan and Chongqing, where it would enter restaurants,
supermarkets or be sold online.
Xinhua reported that 20
people were arrested during the customs operation in Changsha.
The origin of the frozen
meat was not disclosed, but some of it had been stamped with packing dates as
far back as the 1970s.
"It was too smelly!
[There was] a whole truck of it. I almost threw up when I opened the
door," said an officer in the operation.
Some of the meat had
already started to thaw and rot when it arrived in Changsha after 12 hours on
the road. It was placed in cold storage for refreezing before being sent out
again.
According to Hong Kong's
Centre of Food Safety, edible products imported for consumption are subject to
surveillance, but it does not usually conduct tests on food being exported or
re-exported.
The practice was in
accordance with international standards, said a government source.
"Since Hong Kong is
a popular port for transshipment, it would not be possible for the government
to conduct tests on all food that comes through the city. And it would not be
fair to use local resources to conduct food tests for other countries
too," the source said.
A Hong Kong customs
source said there was little it could do if goods were legally imported from
overseas and exported from Hong Kong.
But he said customs could
tip off agencies at the goods' destination if there were suspicions over the
shipment. Hong Kong customs had made various seizures involving frozen meat
"from time to time", but all the seizures were of relatively small
quantities.
A Customs and Excise
Department spokesman said that "based on risk management and
intelligence-led principles, Hong Kong customs identifies and selects shipments
for inspection at the entry and exit points".
Leung Ka-sing, associate
professor of applied biology and chemical technology at Polytechnic University,
said the meat might contain large amounts of cancer-causing chemicals to keep
it preserved for such long periods, or it might carry bacteria that could cause
food poisoning.
Leung said many such
preservatives would be tasteless and hard to detect. Such preservatives, many
of which could cause cancer when consumed in high volume, would not burn off during
the cooking process unless the meat was repeatedly cleaned with boiled water.
The seizure in Changsha
was part of a crackdown across 14 provinces by Chinese customs this month. More
than 100,000 tonnes of frozen chicken, beef, pork and other meat illegally
channelled into the mainland were found, worth more than 3 billion yuan.
Twenty-one groups of smugglers were detained.
In 2014, 295,000 tonnes
of frozen beef, 562,000 tonnes of frozen pork and 440,000 tonnes of frozen
chicken were imported to China, according to mainland customs.
The Huanggang customs in
Shenzhen also found parallel traders smuggling frozen meat and seafood into the
mainland at Futian port during a crackdown in January.
The role of Hong Kong's
food safety watchdog
In Hong Kong, the Centre
for Food Safety conducts tests on various produce, including both fresh and
frozen meat. But it is understood that the centre usually does not conduct
tests on food that is earmarked for export or re-export.
According to the centre,
food safety inspectors take samples for testing at various levels of the supply
chain, adopting the World Health Organisation's "from farm to table"
food safety strategy. It also adopts a risk-based principle in determining the
types of samples to be collected, the frequency and number of samples taken and
the types of analysis to be conducted. The tests cover major food groups such
as fruits and vegetables, meat, poultry, aquatic products, milk and cereals.
The centre said it
conducted tests on about 64,100 food samples last year - about nine samples per
1,000 people in Hong Kong.
Lawmaker Helena Wong
Pik-wan, though, said it may be difficult for health officials to trace online
orders mailed into the city, a loophole that has yet to be plugged.
Wong and other lawmakers
have demanded the centre increase the number of samples it tests, while the
centre said it had a relatively high testing rate compared to overseas
jurisdictions.
Last year, there were 139
unsatisfactory samples found among tested items, resulting in an overall
satisfaction rate of 99.8 per cent.
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