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Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Horsemeat scandal: Dutch recall 50,000 tonnes of meat

BBC News, 10 April 2013

Horsemeat scandal

The horsemeat scandal has
damaged European consumer confidence
in processed food
Dutch authorities have recalled some 50,000 tonnes of meat sold as beef across Europe, over fears that it may contain horsemeat.

The meat was being recalled because its exact source could not be verified, Dutch food authorities said.

The meat was supplied by Dutch trading companies Wiljo Import en Export B.V. and Vleesgroothandel Willy Selten.

About 130 companies in the Netherlands and some 370 more around Europe are affected by the recall.

There was no evidence that the meat was a threat to human health, the Netherlands Food and Consumer Product Safety Authority said.

Inspectors examining the Dutch trading companies' records found that the origin of the supplied meat was unclear, officials added.

As a result it was not possible to confirm whether slaughterhouses had respected procedures.

'Might contain horsemeat'

Some of the meat was exported to Germany, France and Spain. The authorities in those countries have been alerted.

"It might contain traces of horsemeat, but we don't know for certain at the moment if this is the case," the Dutch food authority said on Wednesday.

"The buyers have probably already processed the meat and sold it on. They, in turn, are obliged to inform their own customers."

Horse DNA has been found in numerous processed beef frozen meals across Europe.

In February, Dutch officials raided a meat processing plant suspected of mislabelling beef and withdrew suspicious products from supermarket shelves.

The mislabelled meat was also discovered in the UK, the Republic of Ireland, France, Switzerland, Sweden and Germany.

In response, EU member states have launched tests for horse DNA in processed beef foods and to detect a medicinal drug used on horses.

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