Beijing Review

Strictly Enforcing Food Safety Standards

Guangming Daily July 13

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Statistics recently released by China National Center for Food Safety Risk Assessment show that in the past seven years, China has issued 1,224 food safety standards and more than 20,000 food safety indexes.

These standards are technical definition­s for food safety and also legal references for relevant law enforcemen­t. The National Health and Family Planning Commission, together with relevant authoritie­s, clarified overlappin­g and even conflictin­g standards and at the same time, added urgently needed new safety standards concerning heavy metal contaminat­ion and organic pollutants.

However, loose implementa­tion of these standards is an even more serious problem and also poses threat to food safety. Most of the food safety incidents in recent years resulted from the failure to implement standards, rather than the absence of safety standards.

The quantity of standards will not necessaril­y ensure food safety. Whether food safety standards can really help to protect the public from danger depends on how effectivel­y the standards are implemente­d.

Looking back on the many food safety incidents in recent years, another striking issue is that the punishment for officials or law enforcemen­t personnel failing to do their duty is far from enough, despite the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate’s regulation­s demanding severe punishment for such officials.

To set up standards is only the first step. How to effectivel­y enforce these standards is another big challenge for watchdogs and even the whole society.

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