The Borneo Post

China sacks regional officials as vaccine scandal mounts

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BEIJING: China’s Communist Party has sacked a dozen provincial and local officials and vowed to punish a pharmaceut­ical firm over a vaccine scandal that inflamed public fears over the safety of domestical­ly produced drugs.

The government has been struggling to shore up public confidence in the pharmaceut­ical sector following the revelation last month that a major Chinese manufactur­er of rabies vaccines was found to have fabricated records and was ordered to cease production.

The government has said the suspect rabies vaccines did not enter the market but the case provoked strong outrage online from consumers fed up with recurring product-safety scandals, particular­ly in the drug sector.

The CEO of the company in question, Changchun Changsheng Biotechnol­ogy in the northeast province of Jilin, has been arrested along with 14 other people in connection with the scandal.

The first political casualties fell on Thursday as a dozen officials were removed from office, including Jilin’s deputy governor Jin Yuhui, according to the official Xinhua news agency.

Jin was in charge of monitoring the safety of food and pharmaceut­icals.

The decision to sack him was made at a meeting of the ruling Communist Party’s elite sevenmembe­r standing committee, led by President Xi Jinping.

“Those who break the law and jeopardise public safety, notably in the matter of vaccines and medicines, should be severely punished,” Xinhua reported, citing the meeting’s conclusion­s.

The standing committee also asked for the resignatio­ns of three other officials: The vice-chairman of a provincial committee, the mayor of Jilin’s capital, Changchun, and the deputy head of the State Administra­tion for Market Regulation.

Another eight provincial and city officials were removed from office by the regional leadership.

The former deputy chief of the now defunct China Food and Drug Administra­tion will be investigat­ed by the party’s antigraft agency, Xinhua said.

Another 35 non- centrally administer­ed officials “will be held accountabl­e”, the agency said without elaboratin­g.

China is regularly hit by scandals involving sub-par or toxic food, drugs and other products, despite repeated promises by the government to address the problem.

Since the latest case came to light, the authoritie­s have announced a nationwide inspection of laboratori­es producing vaccines, but many Chinese parents say they no longer have confidence in the medicines administer­ed to their children.

China’s cabinet, the State Council, held a meeting Thursday on the investigat­ion into the latest case. The company will face a fine and all of its “illegal profits” will be confiscate­d, the officials Xinhua news agency reported Friday.

“In its reckless pursuit of profits, the company committed unlawful acts of grave nature,” Xinhua said in its report on the meeting.

The case exposed supervisio­n failures by local government­s and regulatory agencies, it said.

“We must conduct thorough safety checks on vaccine production ... and close all loopholes in the vaccine regulatory mechanism,” Premier Li Keqiang said at a meeting of China’s State Council, according to Xinhua. — AFP

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 ??  ?? File photo shows an aerial view of Mount Everest (centre) and The Himalayan mountain range, some 140kms north-east of Kathmandu. — AFP photo
File photo shows an aerial view of Mount Everest (centre) and The Himalayan mountain range, some 140kms north-east of Kathmandu. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? File photo of a child receiving a vaccinatio­n shot at the local disease control and prevention centre in Jiujiang in China’s central Jiangxi province. — AFP photo
File photo of a child receiving a vaccinatio­n shot at the local disease control and prevention centre in Jiujiang in China’s central Jiangxi province. — AFP photo

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