Horsemeat

Typical blinkered Tories..

Scotsman said:
Tory ministers ‘ignored’ horse meat warnings

SENIOR Conservative figures are at the centre of claims that the government failed to act two years ago on warnings horsemeat had entered the food chain.

At the time, Caroline Spelman was secretary of state in charge of the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra).

Answering to Ms Spelman, Sir Jim Paice was agriculture and food minister in 2011, when, it is claimed, ministers ignored the warnings of contamination.

John Young, a former manager at the Meat Hygiene Service, which is now part of the Food Standards Agency, revealed he helped draft a letter to Defra which ministers disregarded.

The current environment secretary, Owen Paterson, yesterday ordered an investigation into the claims.

Mr Young said the letter was sent by Britain’s largest horsemeat exporter, High Peak Meat Exports, and warned the government that rogue horse flesh with possible drug residue was illegally entering the human food chain.

He said the letter warned the government that its passport scheme designed to stop meat containing the anti-inflamma-tory drug phenylbutazone (bute) getting into the food chain was not working, calling it a“debacle”.

“Defra gave nearly 80 organisations the authority to produce passports and some of them are little better than children could produce,” he said. “It’s a complete mess.”

Ms Spelman was unavailable for comment last night.

Sir Jim said he was not told about the letter. “I would like to know why on Earth I was not being told about it,” he said. “If this information was in Defra and was not being acted upon, it warrants further investigation.”

Sir Jim lost his position in September 2012, the same time as his former boss Ms Spelman was replaced by Mr Paterson as part of a ministerial reshuffle by Prime Minister David Cameron.

The revelation of the letter, which came to light yesterday, prompted Mr Paterson to ask the Food Standards Agency to investigate the claims.

“I have discussed it with the chief executive of the agency and she is going to go back through the records and see exactly what was said at the time,” he said.

A Defra spokesman responded that Mr Paterson had asked the Food Standards Agency’s chief executive and Defra officials to look into the allegations, insisting it was “clear Defra and the FSA have taken action on the issue … when information has been passed to us”.

The spokesman said: “In January 2012, Defra and the FSA increased checks on horse passports, meaning every horse was checked twice, and from last week no horse can enter the food chain until it is confirmed to be free of bute.”

The Food Standards Agency said it had submitted a “full file” on its horsemeat investigation to Europol, the European Union’s law enforcement agency, with information being analysed in 35 countries in Europe and elsewhere.

Meanwhile, UK local authorities were also criticised over their alleged role in the scandal.

Malcolm Walker, chief executive of frozen food firm Iceland, said the blame for contamination lay less with supermarkets and more with councils.

Iceland was among retailers, including Tesco, Asda, Lidl and Aldi, which withdrew products found to test positive for horse DNA.

He said: “British supermarkets have got a fantastic reputation for food safety; they go to enormous lengths to protect their brand.

“If we’re going to blame somebody, let’s start with local authorities because there’s a whole side to this industry which is invisible.

“That’s the catering industry. Schools, hospitals – it’s massive business for cheap food, and local authorities award contracts based purely on one thing: price.”

However, a spokesman for the Local Government Association denied the claims, saying: “The law is 100 per cent clear it is the responsibility of the manufacturer, supplier and retailer to make sure the product they sell us is what they say it is. There has been a major supply chain failure. That’s not the fault of consumers, councils or hospitals.”

The claim and counter-claim came as Mr Paterson called for a Europe-wide overhaul of food testing. He said the current system relied too heavily on trusting paperwork which came with meat shipments.

“The whole problem we have is that the system, which is laid down from above, trusts the paperwork,” he said.

“So it trusts the pallet conforms to the piece of paper. No-one checks what is on the pallet often enough. No-one checks what is in production often enough. No-one checks the finished product often enough.”

The Scottish Government yesterday said “detailed inspections and testing” continued across Scotland – including checks by companies which supply schools, hospital and prisons.

A spokesman confirmed that, to date, no mislabelled meat had been found in Scotland.

Rural affairs secretary Richard Lochhead will today meet UK government officials and representatives from the meat industry to discuss the horsemeat issue further.

He said: “While the ongoing inspections and testing continues, it is important retailers and food service providers are also considering what further action they should be taking to restore the integrity of their supply chains and win back consumer confidence.”

Mr Lochhead urged retailers to review their purchasing practices and said they could avoid selling mislabelled horsemeat by sourcing their produce from Scotland.

Mr Paterson confirmed he is to meet representatives from Sainsbury’s, Morrison, Tesco, Asda, the Food and Drink Federation, and the Institute of Grocery Distribution this afternoon.

A Defra spokeswoman said the meeting was taking place to update officials on testing results and to find out more about what businesses were doing to restore consumer confidence.

Meanwhile, pub and hotel group Whitbread became the latest company to admit horse DNA had been found in its food, saying its meat lasagnes and beefburgers had been removed from menus.

Horsemeat was also discovered in school dinners, with cottage pies testing positive for horse DNA sent to 47 Lancashire schools before being withdrawn.

John Lewis-owned Waitrose announced that it would set up its own freezing plant to prevent cross-contamination.

Waitrose withdrew a number of products when the horsemeat scandal came to light. Although none of its products tested positive for horse DNA, some own-brand meatballs were found to contain traces of pork.

Managing director Mark Price urged the food industry to apply “renewed rigour” to their testing regimes. He said: “If something good comes of the current scandal, I hope it is the opening up of a debate around the true economics of food.

“The simple fact is that food cannot be seen as a cheap commodity when so many factors are working against that premise, including population growth.”
 
Now found in Nestlé products in Spain and italy from a German supplier.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-21501568
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.

Hopfully it'll keep expanding, that way we might have a slim chance for reform on labeling.
 
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Colin-M-Robinson-Family-Butcher

THE TRUTH ABOUT CHEAP MEAT

No doubt you are outraged about the horse meat scandal. You have every right to be – criminality, profiteering, potential fraud, all have led to many people eating an animal they would probably prefer to see in the 3.20 at Kempton and possibly also ingesting dangerous veterinary drugs.

However, I’m going to come at this from another angle and it’s this: it’s your own bloody fault. There you go.

I know, I know; you’re not happy. It’s not your fault is it? It’s the government, the supermarkets, criminals and Goodness knows who else.

But it’s not just them, you see. It’s you.

After a week of this story my patience has finally snapped, and it’s time someone told you a few home truths.

Many of us have been banging on for years about this stuff, trying to make you care about the need for better food labeling, about fairness for farmers, about the need to support local farms to avoid all our food coming from giant, uncaring corporate agri-businesses which churn out cheap product to feed the insatiable appetite of supermarket price-cutting.

We’ve been highlighting the unfairness of UK farmers being forced to meet 73 different regulations to sell to supermarkets which don’t apply to foreign suppliers, and talking about our children growing up with no understanding of food production and, more than all of this, about the way supermarkets have driven down and down and down the cost of meat to the point where people think it’s normal to buy 3lbs of beef (in burgers) for 90p.

And you wouldn’t listen. It was like shouting into a gale.

Through the years of New Labour, when farming and the countryside were demonised, you wouldn’t listen. You cheerfully chose to believe that all farmers were Rolls Royce driving aristocrats, as painted by John Prescott. You had no sympathyYou wanted a chicken for £2 and your Sunday roast for a fiver. Well, you got them didn’t you? And hundreds of farmers went to the wall. And you still didn’t care because Turkey slices were ten for 60p.

And now you’re furious, because it turns out that when you pay peanuts for something it’s actually not very good. Who knew eh?

And before you start, don’t even think about the “it’s all right for the rich who can go to local butcher’s shops but what about the poor?” line. The number of people who can’t afford adequate amounts of food is tiny – tragic and wrong, yes, but tiny. Supermarkets don’t make their billions from them hunting in the “reduced” basket, they make their money from millions of everyday folk filling a weekly trolley. You, in other words.

Until the mid 1990s, Britain was also full of good local abattoirs. They were run by people who knew the local farmers who used them, and the local butchers which sold the meat. They were closed in their hundreds by new health and safety regulations which made it impossible for small abattoirs to compete with giant companies doing the job more cheaply.

We tried to tell you, you didn’t care.

And of course, unlike the previous generation you were “too busy” to actually cook. You were so busy that the idea of making a meal, then making two more out of the left-overs, was like something from Cider With Rosie to you. You bought a meal every night. And so it had to be cheap.

We tried to tell you. You just pointed out that Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall went to Eton and sneered at us.

Cheap rearing abroad. You didn’t care. Cheap slaughtering by machine. You didn’t care. Cheap meat full of crap and off-cuts. You didn’t care. Frozen blocks of meat off-cuts from the abattoir floor being trucked in from Poland to ensure your pack of mince was cheap enough. You didn’t care. In fact you didn’t know, but that’s because you didn’t care.

But we cared. We kept trying to tell you. We launched campaigns, we wrote letters, we raised funds for adverts. Nobody knows what they’re eating anymore, we said. Nobody recognises how hard it is for farmers here to produce quality meat at a price they can sell because of the supermarkets.

And you didn’t care.

Well, now you know you’ve been munching on Dobbin and his various nasty drugs, possibly for years. And now you care.

And yes, you’ve been misled, cheated, lied to. But you must also take some of the responsibility. You didn’t tell supermarkets you wanted quality, you just watched the ads which said “175 products cheaper at Asda this week than Tesco” and went to Asda. You made the market they sold in to, you set their priorities. They gave you what you wanted.

So what will you do now? Now that you care.

How about this…

Rather than just moaning at MPs why not actually think about what you eat, what you buy, where it comes from? Why not visit a farm on an open day? Take the kids, show them where their food comes from. If it’s a good farm, why not try to use your consumer power accordingly to make more farms that way? To make them viable. Why not have a think about how you could make meat go further without spending more, through cooking, and thus be able to buy good, British, assured quality meat?

If you do that, I’ll stop blaming you, and some good may come of all of this.

The culprits responsible for all this will be found, and no doubt tried and hopefully convicted. With luck new rules will be introduced to make a repeat harder. But the market will find a way – it always does. So long as there is a demand for vast quantities of ultra-cheap meat, people will find a way to supply it. So long as people remain uninterested in where their food comes from and how it’s made, someone will cut corners.

It’s a ravenous beast, the market. Like its customers, as it turns out.

So now that you care I’ll tell you that we’ve been highlighting the plight of dairy farmers this year; explaining how supermarkets are paying such a pittance that they can’t stay in business and milk is increasingly coming in from abroad, where standards are lower. Pleasingly people noticed. Some people. If you weren’t one, perhaps, given events, you might like to now?

And when you’ve done that, take a look at the video in the link below, which details the Countryside Alliance’s hard-fought campaign on country-of-origin food labeling. Whilst you were suggesting the CA was only interested in fox hunting, it was doing this, for you, and now you know.
 
More horse found

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-mid-wales-21536476
Beefburgers made by a mid Wales firm are being withdrawn after tests on samples showed evidence of horsemeat.

Three samples from the Burger Manufacturing Company (BMC), a catering supplier based in Builth Wells, tested positive for at least 1% horsemeat.

Powys council carried out the tests at the request of the Food Standards Agency.

The agency said BMC was withdrawing the products and contacting customers to recall affected products.

Further work is being carried out to establish exactly how much horsemeat these products contain and to test for the presence of the veterinary medicine phenylbutazone, or bute.

A council spokesperson said: "It has been confirmed that out of the samples taken from two different producers in the county, three samples of beef products (burgers) have tested positive for horse and lamb meat.

Seems its pretty much found everywhere.
Bring on food & especially labeling reform.
 
It's suprising that Burger King and McDonalds haven't fallen foul of all this yet. They must have some cast-iron checks in place if this isn't hitting them
 
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