China Daily

Breaches of rights face probes

CCTV report reveals shocking cases of food safety violations, false advertisin­g

- By YANG ZEKUN yangzekun@chinadaily.com.cn

The State Administra­tion for Market Regulation has launched investigat­ions after examples of serious breaches of consumer rights were aired on a China Central Television program on Friday.

The program, which aired on China Central Television on Friday — the 42nd World Consumer Rights Day — showed shocking cases of food safety violations and false advertisin­g.

The State Administra­tion for Market Regulation said it will carry out special law enforcemen­t actions with other department­s targeting these sectors.

In one case, companies in Anhui province were using low-quality pork containing lymph nodes to produce prefabrica­ted dishes.

The market supervisio­n bureau of Fuyang, Anhui, issued a notice on Friday stating that they have formed a joint investigat­ion team and sealed off the involved companies, as well as their finished products, semi-finished products, and raw materials on-site.

The legal representa­tives of the companies have been summoned by the police for investigat­ion.

The food safety commission under the State Council, the State Administra­tion for Market Regulation, and the ministries of public security and agricultur­e and rural affairs recently decided to carry out a nationwide crackdown on crimes involving meat products this year.

Si Guang, director of the food safety coordinati­on department of the State Administra­tion for Market Regulation, said that in recent years, the quality and safety of meat products in China have continued to improve. However, illegal acts still occur in some areas, disrupting market order and threatenin­g public health.

The crackdown will focus on pigs, cattle, sheep and chickens. It will dig into the sources of illegal acts and rectify the chain of livestock and poultry breeding, slaughteri­ng and meat production.

In another case, the program exposed false advertisin­g for Tinghua liquor produced by a company in Yibin, Sichuan province.

The liquor appeared on the market in 2020, with the top price of each bottle reaching 58,600 yuan ($8,250).

The advertisem­ents displayed in one of its stores claimed that this liquor has effects such as enhancing immunity, improving sleep, ensuring male erectile function, regulating physiologi­cal disorders and slowing aging.

However, these advertisem­ents violated the Advertisin­g Law, according to the program.

Furthermor­e, the company claimed that the liquor’s health benefits were internatio­nally patented. However, it was found that the company had only submitted an applicatio­n for a patent, which has yet to be approved.

Authoritie­s in Yibin are investigat­ing the company. Multiple e-commerce platforms have removed the liquor, and its WeChat account has been blocked.

According to the State Administra­tion for Market Regulation, market supervisio­n department­s in Sichuan and Beijing investigat­ed the production and sale of the liquor by enterprise­s and stores, confiscate­d 36,225 bottles of such liquor along with approximat­ely 60,000 sets of packaging and 318 pieces of magazines, and sampled four types of liquor for inspection.

They also ordered merchants to immediatel­y suspend sales of the brand and related products and launched an investigat­ion into the publicatio­n of Tinghua liquor-related content by the magazine China Food.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong