Dozens of children's wear factories in east China's Zhejiang Province, have received serious
warnings after 40 percent of their products were found to have
quality problems, according to local quality supervision
authorities.
In the latest inspection, only 44 out of 72 batches of
children's wear products inspected in Wuxing District, Huzhou city,
which produces a quarter of the country's children's garments, met
standards and their "quality index" was the lowest since 2003,
according to the Zhejiang provincial quality and technical
supervision administration.
The inspection is only part of a four-month nationwide campaign
to improve product quality and food safety launched in late August,
after a series of quality problems in China-made products, ranging
from toys to pet food, were exposed abroad.
Described by Vice-Premier Wu Yi as a "special battle" to ensure public
health and interest and maintain a good image of Chinese products,
the campaign has targeted farm produce, processed food, catering,
drugs, pork, and imported and exported products.
The garments in Wuxing District of Huzhou had problems with the
dyes, fibre content and stitching, said the local product safety
administration. All the problematic garments were produced by
non-exporting companies.
The administration gave a "yellow warning" to the Wuxing
district, demanding the local government and factories immediately
improve quality.
The samples of the unqualified products were confiscated and the
garment factories were ordered to make substantial quality
improvements within one year, said Feng Weijun, an official with
the administration.
(Xinhua News Agency September 15, 2007)