China Daily

Beijing looking for restaurant­s with unhygienic kitchens

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn Xinhua contribute­d to this story.

Beijing’s food safety watchdog has begun a two-week sanitation inspection of the city’s restaurant­s, following news reports that two Beijing branches of a popular hotpot chain were unhygienic.

The Beijing Food and Drug Administra­tion announced the inspection over the weekend, saying its main targets will be restaurant chains, canteen suppliers and establishm­ents with previous food safety problems.

“Business licenses, dishwasher­s, sanitation equipment and pest and disease control are the focus of the inspection,” said Duan Zhiyong, director of the administra­tion’s supervisio­n department.

Legal Evening News, a Beijing newspaper, reported on Friday that the operations of two Beijing branches of Haidilao, a popular hotpot chain with restaurant­s in about 60 Chinese cities, were unsanitary.

Videos taken by hidden cameras showed rat-infested kitchens, a dishwasher caked with oily food residue and a worker trying to fix a sewage blockage with a soup ladle.

The hotpot chain, which originated in Jianyang, Sichuan province, admitted its management faults and apologized in a public statement issued on Friday afternoon.

The administra­tion has launched a safety check on all branches of the hotpot chain in the city and talked to representa­tives of the company on Saturday.

“We’ve also ordered Haidilao to open its kitchens to the public in a month and report its overhaul measures,” the statement said, adding that the chain’s sanitation rating will be downgraded.

Fan Jing, a Beijing native and a hotpot fan, applauded the inspection, “because food safety must take priority in a restaurant’s operation”. But she said the inspection should be extended to small canteens in the city.

“Food safety checks in supermarke­ts or big restaurant­s are common, but grocery stores with some safety risks in communitie­s are rarely inspected,” she said.

Li Xiaoou, another Beijing native, said the administra­tion should disclose the inspection results in a timely manner online, to help residents know about problems and which restaurant­s are unhygienic.

“After all, we cannot check whether a restaurant’s kitchen is clean or not when we eat there. What we rely on is the authoritie­s’ increasing supervisio­n, and self-inspection­s by the restaurant­s,” he said.

 ?? CAO BOYUAN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? An inspector from the Beijing Food and Drug Administra­tion checks the condition of a Haidilao restaurant’s kitchen in Beijing on Friday, soon after a report that it was unhygienic.
CAO BOYUAN / FOR CHINA DAILY An inspector from the Beijing Food and Drug Administra­tion checks the condition of a Haidilao restaurant’s kitchen in Beijing on Friday, soon after a report that it was unhygienic.

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