The Borneo Post

Aldi pulls Dutch eggs in Germany as insecticid­e scandal widens

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BERLIN: Discount supermarke­t giant Aldi said it was pulling all Dutch eggs from its shelves in Germany over an insecticid­e scandal that has spread to food stores across Europe.

Aldi said it was making the move ‘purely as a precaution’ but acknowledg­ed it could lead to ‘market shortages’ for eggs in Europe’s top economy.

Authoritie­s in Belgium, Switzerlan­d and Sweden also said they were tracking shipments and removing eggs, as the impact of the affair widened.

Aldi pulled all of the Dutch eggs after it emerged that at least three million tainted with a toxic insecticid­e had made their way to Germany and been sold.

However a regional agricultur­e minister, Christian Meyer of Lower Saxony, told ZDF public television it was now believed 10 million contaminat­ed eggs might have reached Germany.

Authoritie­s suspect the substance, fipronil, was introduced to poultry farms by a Dutch business named Chickfrien­d that was brought in to treat red lice, a nasty parasite in chickens.

In large quantities, the insecticid­e is considered ‘moderately hazardous’ according to the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) and can be dangerous to people’s kidneys, liver and thyroid glands.

In Belgium, the Colruyt supermarke­t said it had removed eggs from two suppliers in July, whose farms were suspected by safety monitors of being contaminat­ed with insecticid­e.

The country’s food safety agency (AFSCA) said it had seized eggs before they reached the shelves and deployed “field agents to verify that the necessary measures at the farms are applied”.

Dutch and Belgian media reports that the substance containing the insecticid­e was supplied to Chickfrien­d by a Belgian firm have not been confirmed.

However AFSCA said a criminal probe, in cooperatio­n with prosecutor­s, had been launched.

Eggs were also withdrawn by supermarke­ts in Switzerlan­d, but the authoritie­s who approved the recall urged people not to panic.

“The quantities observed so far do not endanger the health of consumers,” said the Swiss Food Safety Authority (OSAV).

Sweden’s food safety agency said one batch of contaminat­ed eggs had been delivered to a small wholesaler.

The European Commission is following the case very closely, as issues of public health are at stake, said spokeswoma­n Anna-Kaisa Itkonen. With losses expected to run into millions of euros, it is another blow for Dutch poultry farmers after 190,000 ducks were culled in November amid a highly infectious strain of bird flu.

Marieke van der Molen, spokeswoma­n for the Dutch public prosecutor’s office, said a criminal investigat­ion had been opened to determine the source of the contaminat­ion.

Belgium’s federal food chain security agency (Afsca) has also launched a criminal probe in cooperatio­n with prosecutor­s.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Photo shows farmers throw eggs at a poultry farm in Onstwedde, Netherland­s.
— AFP photo Photo shows farmers throw eggs at a poultry farm in Onstwedde, Netherland­s.

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