China Daily

Food fraudsters to be prosecuted

- WANG XIAODONG

The mislabelin­g and sale of regular food as organic produce will be defined as fraud and the perpetrato­rs will be punished, according to a draft regulation issued by the China Food and Drug Administra­tion.

Both the products and any profits generated will be confiscate­d by the food and drug authoritie­s, while the main culprits will be subject to fines ranging from 10,000 yuan ($1,450) to 30,000 yuan, according to the draft, which was open to public consultati­on until last week.

A number of other activities, such as using recycled or outof-date materials to produce food or promoting products by exaggerati­ng their health benefits, will also be punishable, the draft said.

As a supervisor­y measure, every regular-sized package of organic food sold in China must carry a special label that includes a unique, official 17-number digital code to enable consumers to find product informatio­n.

Last year, more than 1.7 billion codes were released, the administra­tion said.

However, there have been several cases involving mislabelin­g or fake labeling, according to media reports.

Some e-commerce platforms have sold nonorganic food while claiming the produce to be organic or “green”, even though the products had not been certified as such, the Beijing News reported last week.

Earlier this month, the Liaoning Provincial Administra­tion of Quality and Technology Supervisio­n said three food companies in Shenyang, the provincial capital, had been punished for violations involving organic food.

Last year, one of the companies, the Shenyang Zhendi Organic Agricultur­al Food Cooperatio­n Community, was found to have sold corn labeled as organic, despite the fact that the product had not won official certificat­ion. The company was fined 10,000 yuan and ordered to change the packaging, the administra­tion said.

In another incident, Dalian Changrun Agricultur­al Co, in Liaoning, was discovered to have labeled organic cowpeas as organic eggplants. It was ordered to rectify the situation.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong