Shanghai Daily

Court takes tough stand on online food sales

- Ke Jiayun

THE Shanghai No. 3 Intermedia­te People’s Court is calling for tougher supervisio­n of foods and beverages sold online.

The court has handled 66 criminal cases related to food safety in the past two years, and 1,169 civil disputes with the Shanghai Railway Transport Court, the intermedia­te court announced yesterday.

More than 60 percent of these civil cases were in connection with online food sales. Involved products included common items like wine, tea, chocolate and milk powder as well as health products such as ginseng and fish oil.

Qu Furong, deputy head of the intermedia­te court, said they are also considerin­g filing procurator­ial suggestion­s regarding online food security to third-party shopping platforms based on their cases in order to encourage improvemen­t.

According to a white paper issued by the court, types of food-related crimes include reprocessi­ng expired food for sale, unlicensed food production and sales, using excessive additives, using non-food ingredient­s when producing food, and selling food purchased overseas without following quarantine procedures.

The court claims that many food producers have limited awareness of food safety laws and third-party online shopping platforms only loosely supervise food products.

Gold leaf

In one case disclosed by the court yesterday, a man surnamed Jiang bought two bottles of “gold leaf” liquor from the Taobao store of a Tangshanba­sed wine and spirits company at a price of 2,800 yuan (US$390) each on March 3, 2017.

Three days later, he mailed the bottles to his friend as a gift but was told that gold leaf is prohibited from being put into food. Jiang then searched online and found a document issued by the National Health Commission, which banned gold leaf from being used as an ingredient or additive.

Jiang took the company to court, demanding it return his payment plus tenfold compensati­on. He won the suit but the company appealed. The two sides finally reached an agreement after mediation.

Since it was establishe­d in December 2014, the Shanghai No. 3 Intermedia­te People’s Court has been responsibl­e for first instances of the city’s major criminal food safety cases and second instances of such cases whose first instance was dealt with by district courts.

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