DutchNews.nl, April 22, 2015
The maximum fines which Dutch food safety
inspectors can levy on companies caught meddling with food has been increased
from €4,500 to €810,000 following a vote in parliament on Tuesday evening.
‘It
was absurd that you could be fined €800,000 for sending spam email messages and
not for deliberately adding rubbish to food,’ Labour MP Sjoera Dikkers, who
sponsored the motion, is quoted by broadcaster Nos as saying after the vote.
For example, fish processing company Foppen, at the centre of a major
salmonella scare last year, was given four fines of just €1,050.
Ministers
wanted to raise the maximum fines to €81,000 but Dikkers said that was not
enough to force companies to keep to health and hygiene rules.
The consumers’
association welcomed the change in the law. ‘Consumers have had to deal with
food scandals time after time,’ a spokesman said. ‘This has made the need for
higher fines painfully obvious.’
Dikkers is also campaigning to have all fines
administered by food safety inspectors made public.

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