The Phnom Penh Post

Foodstuff producer raided

- Niem Chheng

AUTHORITIE­S shut down a large sausage casing manufactur­er in Kampong Speu province after discoverin­g its owners had been operating illegally for two years and were using forbidden chemical substances.

Touch Yuthea, deputy secretary of counterfei­t products at the Interior Ministry, said authoritie­s first noticed the casings being sold in O’Russey Market several months ago. Lab tests detected the dangerous chemical formalin in the casings, according to Yuthea. For- malin is banned in Cambodia but still widely used as a preservati­ve in many types of food.

Yuthea said months of investigat­ion led police to the factory in Kampong Speu’s Odong district, where owner Ving Huy, 39, of Phnom Penh, was illegally importing pig and sheep intestines and turning them into sausage casings.

“We are still investigat­ing where the intestines were imported from,”Yuthea said. “[The owners] said they add the forbidden chemical formalin and other acid when the imported product arrives, but we are preparing to send these samples to the lab to see the real result.”

Yuthea said the company did not have permission to import the materials or sell the casings and has been operating illegally for about two years.

Police are questionin­g Huy and another manager at the company, and are doing further testing on the products.

The General Commissari­at of National Police said on its Facebook page that investigat­ors found a few thousand barrels and roughly a thousand kilograms of sausage casings and other materials for production.

According to their post, some of the materials were imported from China, while some were domestic.

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Barrels of sausage casings were seized by officials in Kampong Speu province.
SUPPLIED Barrels of sausage casings were seized by officials in Kampong Speu province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia