Home / NPC & CPPCC Sessions 2009 / News Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read | Comment
Overlapping adminstration, lax supervision blamed for food scandals
Adjust font size:

A political advisor on Sunday blamed overlapping administration among different government departments and lax supervision as "major ills" for the repeated food safety scandals in China.

"A spate of incidents including poisonous rice and infant formula scandal in recent years have brought food safety into the spotlight," Yan Huiying, a member of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), said at a plenary meeting of the top political advisory body.

"People's concern on food safety rises with each passing day," said Yan, also chairwoman of the Triastoria Group.

According to Yan, there was a popular saying going among the public: "We are afraid of hormone when having meat, poison when having vegetables, dye when drinking beverage. Actually we are not sure what to eat now."

China's top legislature approved the Food Safety Law last month, providing a legal basis for the government to strengthen food safety control "from the production line to the dining table."

The law, which goes into effect on June 1, 2009, said the State Council, or Cabinet, would set up a state-level food safety commission to oversee the entire food monitoring system, whose lack of efficiency has long been blamed for repeated scandals.

"If the commission is only a high-level institution to coordinate issues concerning different departments, it will be difficult to address problems from the root," she said.

China's current food safety system involves at least five departments, including health, agriculture, quality supervision, industry and commerce administration, and food and drug supervision, resulting in overlapping or loopholes in administration.

Yan proposed to endow the commission with supervisory power on each of the departments and to impose severe penalties on government officials and staff of monitoring agencies who were found with dereliction of duties, graft or abuse of power.

(Xinhua News Agency March 8, 2009)

 

Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read
Comment
Pet Name
Anonymous
China Archives
Related >>
- Star advisor grumbles about China's food safety law
- Health Ministry gears up for food safety monitoring
- Corruption and food safety top netizen concerns
- Efforts to implement food safety law
Questions and Answers More
Q: What kind of law is there in place to protect pandas?
A: In order to put the protection of giant pandas and other wildlife under the law, the Chinese government put the protection of rare animals and plants into the Constitution.
Useful Info
- Who's Who in China's Leadership
- State Structure
- China's Political System
- China's Legislative System
- China's Judicial System
- Mapping out 11th Five-Year Guidelines
Links
- Chinese Embassies
- International Department, Central Committee of CPC
- State Organs Work Committee of CPC
- United Front Work Department, Central Committee of CPC