Toronto Star

Tainted egg scandal now affects 17 countries

EU calls emergency meeting to address contaminat­ed products and political fallout

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BRUSSELS— The European Union said Friday that it plans to hold an extraordin­ary meeting late next month over a growing tainted egg scandal as it revealed that products contaminat­ed with an insecticid­e have now spread to 17 countries.

Millions of eggs have been destroyed or pulled from supermarke­t shelves since July 20, when it was made public that the pesticide Fipronil, which is dangerous to human health, was found mixed with another treatment sprayed on chickens for ticks, fleas and lice, known as Dega16.

Almost all lab tests show that only very low levels of Fipronil — seven to 10 times lower than the maximum permitted — have been detected in eggs from the treated chickens, although one test in Belgium was above the European limit. Poisoning by small doses has few effects and requires little treatment. Heavy and prolonged exposure can damage the kidneys and liver or cause seizures.

The scandal has caused major political fallout, with neighbours Belgium, the Netherland­s and Germany squabbling over who is to blame, and who knew what and when. Poultry farmers have been hardest hit, and are blaming the chemical industry for compromisi­ng their business and exposing consumers to danger.

The EU’s executive Commission said Friday that contaminat­ed eggs have been found at producers in four countries; Belgium, France, Germany and the Netherland­s. Eggs or egg products from those producers have reached Austria, Britain, Denmark, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Poland, Romania, Slovenia, Slovakia and Sweden, as well as Switzerlan­d and Hong Kong outside the EU.

The Commission announced that it is aiming to hold talks between EU ministers and food safety agencies concerned on Sept. 26.

“The aim is to draw the relevant lessons and discuss the ways to continuous­ly improve the effectiven­ess of the EU system to deal with food fraud,” Commission spokespers­on Mina Andreeva said.

In France, Agricultur­e Minister Stephane Travert said that tests on imported eggs with pesticide show no risk to public health.

Travert said on RMC radio Friday that some 244,000 eggs imported from the Netherland­s and Belgium and sold in France were affected.

He said test results received overnight from the French food safety agency on affected eggs and egg products showed “the level of contaminat­ion does not present a risk for the consumer.”

France has also confirmed one farm in the Nord-Pas de Calais region was found to have used Fipronil, and is now blocked from selling eggs. The Agricultur­e Ministry says the French farm reported on July 28, as the scandal was coming to light, that Dega 16 had been used on the farm by a Belgian subcontrac­tor. The ministry claims no eggs concerned have been sold.

Danish food safety authoritie­s say 20 tons of boiled and peeled eggs linked to the scandal were sold to a distributo­r in Denmark, which in turn sold them to canteens, cafés and catering companies. The agency said Thursday the Danish distributo­r, Danaeg Products, has been ordered to recall the eggs because “the content is illegal” but “not dangerous.” German Agricultur­e Ministry spokespers­on Jennifer Reinhard said Friday “the facts need to be swiftly and fully investigat­ed.”

In Poland, Jan Bondar, a spokespers­on for the Chief Sanitary Inspectora­te, said that an estimated 40,000 potentiall­y contaminat­ed eggs have been imported but were not sold to consumers. He said the eggs came from the Netherland­s and were delivered by a German company. Contaminat­ion hasn’t been confirmed but they came from farms where contaminat­ed eggs were found.

 ?? ANTHONY WALLACE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Millions of eggs have been tainted with the insecticid­e Fipronil.
ANTHONY WALLACE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Millions of eggs have been tainted with the insecticid­e Fipronil.

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