Edmonton Journal

Hazards found in food items from China

- Andy Blatchford

OTTAWA • Canadian inspectors intercepte­d nearly 900 food products from China over concerns about faulty labels, unmentione­d allergens and harmful contaminan­ts that included glass and metal between 2017 and early 2019, according to internal federal records.

The document provides an inside look at imports from China that caught the attention of officials for appearing to fall short of Canadian standards — from gum balls with “extraneous” metal, to three-minute chow mein that contained an insect, to spicy octopus feet flagged for a “non-specific hazard.”

The list, compiled by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, was obtained through access-to-informatio­n law.

Its release comes at a time of significan­t public interest in Canada about cross-border food inspection­s, especially those involving China.

The scrutiny of agricultur­al goods has been central to a diplomatic dispute between Canada and its second-biggest trading partner. Bilateral frictions have intensifie­d since the December arrest of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou in Vancouver and China’s subsequent detention of two Canadians on espionage allegation­s.

The governing Liberals have come under pressure from rival Conservati­ves to respond by taking a harder line when it comes to Chinese imports.

In recent weeks, China asked Canada to suspend all its meat-export certificat­es to the Asian country after Chinese customs inspectors detected residue from a restricted feed additive, called ractopamin­e, in a batch of Canadian pork products.

A statement by China’s embassy in Ottawa said the investigat­ion uncovered at least 188 forged veterinary health certificat­es and argued the Canadian system had “obvious safety loopholes.”

Chinese authoritie­s have also blocked imports of Canadian canola seeds, alleging they found pests in some shipments. The federal government says it has tried unsuccessf­ully to send a delegation of inspectors to China to examine the evidence.

The economic consequenc­es of China’s trade actions on Canadian food shipments, as well as the detentions of Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, are widely seen as attempts by Beijing to pressure the Liberal government into releasing Meng.

Agricultur­e Minister Marie-claude Bibeau said in an emailed statement that the issues in the CFIA list do not necessaril­y correlate to a particular problem with imported food products from foreign countries.

The list only provides numbers for China and does not include comparable numbers for Canada’s other trading partners.

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