Beijing's largest pork provider on Monday displayed to locals
and the world alike that its meat was safe for all, not only
Olympic athletes.
With more than 150 Chinese and foreign reporters watching from
behind glass windows in a north Beijing suburb, workers decked out
in blue robes and white rubber boots from Pengcheng Food Branch of
Beijing Shunxin Agriculture Co. Ltd demonstrated the fine art of
shaving and washing pig carcasses hung along an assembly line in a
closed workshop.
"A pig has to go through 18 procedures before becoming packed
pork to be sent to supermarkets," said Yang Wenke, general manager
of Pengcheng, which provides more than 40 percent of Beijing's
pork.
The abattoir, which kills 8,000 to 10,000 pigs daily, has 24
quarantine workers working each shift to ensure all its products
are healthy and safe.
Each day, three percent of the animals slaughtered are sampled
for drug residue and no big problems have been found in the past
five years, Yang added.
The company has 186 farms around the country to raise pigs and
even owns its feed plants so that it can control quality from the
start.
Yang said great efforts were now being made to control the
feeding procedure. "We spare no efforts to use quality feed and
antibiotics in a safe way according to the relevant state
rules."
But, as one of the candidates to supply pork for next year's
Beijing Olympic Games, Pengcheng said it has neither made nor
planned any special arrangement for the meat that Olympic athletes
will eat
Monday's display for the media came on the back of claim made
three months ago by rival pork producer Qianxihe Group that it was
raising pigs destined especially for Olympic dining halls. The
company said that it was feeding the animals organic feed and
Chinese herbal medicine and was even putting them through two hours
of daily exercise.
The news roused a public debate over a "double standard" in food
quality.
The Beijing Organizing Committee for the Games of the XXIX
Olympiad (BOCOG) denied earlier this month that it had asked any
supplier to produce any special pork for the sporting
spectacular.
A BOCOG spokesman said the quality of pork sold in Beijing
market was good and met the need of the Games. He declined to say
when the tender for pork suppliers would be decided.
"All pork bought from regular sources is qualified and raised
with safe feed. The state food regulators also inspect pork quality
regularly," said Qiao Xiaoling, director of research and
development for Beijing-based China Meat Research Center, "But it
is understandable that organic pork is better."
"Such pork is available in Beijing markets. Anyone can buy it if
they are willing to pay more. "
Quarantine watchdogs open to press
The large media group organized by the BOCOG on Monday visited
not only pork and chicken producers but also the labs of the
General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and
Quarantine (GAQSIQ) and the Beijing Entry-Exit Inspection and
Quarantine Bureau. They were able to talk with various scientists
about how they test for chemicals, metals and microbes in food.
"I am not an expert to say whether Chinese foods are safe or
not," said Marue Vlaskamp, a reporter from Dutch TV station RTL.
"But as a journalist I am happy to attend today's event and hope to
have more chances to introduce what is happening here to the
world."
The quality of the meat producers facilities left a good
impression on the foreign journalists. "The workshops we visited
today were clean and equipped with the latest machinery. I feel
that the meat produced here is safe," said Hideki Yui of NHK in
Japan.
"Although a visit will not change foreigners concerns, Chinese
food quality authorities and food producers showed their confidence
by opening themselves to the media," said Zhang Weiqun, a TV
producer from the Associated Press Beijing office.
Li Zhanjun, director of BOCOG Media Center, said that the media
pool was organized because food safety was a hot topic and the
center received many media requests from both home and abroad.
(Xinhua News Agency November 13, 2007)