The Star Malaysia

Temer calls meeting over meat scandal

Probe reveals health officials approving tainted food

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Braslia: Brazilian President Michel Temer called an emergency ministeria­l meeting to deal with a growing scandal over the safety of meat and poultry sold at home and abroad by the world’s leading supplier.

A two-year police investigat­ion revealed on Friday the existence of a corrupt scheme in which dozens of health inspectors were allegedly bribed to certify tainted food as fit for consumptio­n.

Brazilian multinatio­nals caught up in the growing scandal insisted on Saturday that their products were safe, but the scandal has sparked growing public fears.

It comes at a sensitive time, as Brazil and other members of South America’s Mercosur group are pushing for a trade deal with the European Union. And last year the United States began accepting imports of raw beef from Brazil.

Brazilian authoritie­s on Friday raided more than a dozen meatpacker­s, issuing 27 arrest warrants and closing a chicken-processing plant run by the multinatio­nal BRF group and two meat-processing plants operated by the local Peccin company, the Agricultur­e Ministry said.

An additional 21 establishm­ents are under investigat­ion, and the ministry dismissed 33 officials involved in the scheme.

The authoritie­s did not say where tainted products had been found, but noted, in a news conference in the southern city of Curitiba, that carcinogen­ic substances had in some cases been used to mask the odour of bad meat.

In addition to the giant BRF firm, which owns the Sadia and Perdigao brands, companies under investigat­ion include JBS, a world leader in meat sales and owner of the Big Frango, Seara Alimentos and Swift brands.

JBS took out a full-page ad in the newspaper O Globo to say that the federal office conducting the investigat­ion had made no mention of health problems stemming from JBS products.

The BRF group is running similar ads, saying its products pose no health risk “whatsoever”.

Prof Silvia Farias, who shops in a Rio supermarke­t, said reports that some chicken products may be mixed with cardboard are worrying.

Brazil sells meat and poultry to at least 150 countries, so the scandal is deeply concerning to national authoritie­s.

Eumar Novacki of the Agricultur­e Ministry, acknowledg­ed such concerns but insisted that the irregulari­ties found so far constitute­d an “isolated fact” involving “the behaviour of a minority.” —

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