The Northern Advocate

Berry sabotage shows supply vulnerabil­ity

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The discovery of needles in a punnet of Australian strawberri­es sold in an Auckland supermarke­t is frightenin­g and upsetting.

Many New Zealanders will have felt for those caught up in the strawberry sabotage across the Tasman in the past two weeks: The anxious public, the devastated producers, the wary retailers.

It has been heartbreak­ing to see pictures of huge piles of prime strawberri­es being dumped for fear they may contain pins or needles.

What a needless waste of resources, too — of the space, soil, straw, nutrients and water required to produce each punnet of fruit; of the human time and labour involved in planting, picking, packing, distributi­ng, marketing and selling the product.

It is hard to know what to do for the best.

At this stage we can only imagine the purpose behind these acts of sabotage. In Australia, a young boy was arrested after admitting to inserting needles in the berries. With more than 100 similar cases reported there, authoritie­s believe copycat offenders are also to blame. Is the same scenario playing out here?

A youngster may think they are committing a prank, but may be unaware of the ramificati­ons of their actions. The cost to the industry of what amounts to food terrorism is potentiall­y huge.

New Zealand, as a primary producer, is aware of its vulnerabil­ity. We have rigorous biosecurit­y measures, but the battle against pests and diseases is relentless.

Many taxpayer millions go on education, screening, testing, eradicatio­n and management. The cost to the economy in the event of a major crisis is even greater.

The last thing this country needs, then, is an intentiona­l act of food sabotage. We like to think our food security measures are robust and we can have faith in our products and producers. Indeed, we bank on that to sell our products in other markets.

But, we are vulnerable to individual­s who seek to do harm. Not long ago NZ was effectivel­y held to ransom just by a threat to contaminat­e infant milk formula with 1080.

The authoritie­s face a formidable task finding those responsibl­e — potentiall­y on both sides of the Tasman — in this case. It is hoped the culprits can be identified as soon as possible, however, so this frightenin­g episode can be put to rest before more damage is done.

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