Business Day

Salmonella shock hits 83 countries

- Agency Staff Paris

A salmonella scandal at French dairy group Lactalis had affected 83 countries, where 12-million boxes of powdered baby milk were being recalled, the company’s CEO said on Sunday.

A salmonella scandal at French dairy group Lactalis has affected 83 countries, where 12-million boxes of powdered baby milk are being recalled, the company’s CEO said on Sunday.

Emmanuel Besnier, scion of the secretive family behind one of the world’s biggest dairy groups, was speaking publicly for the first time since an outcry over claims that the company had hidden the salmonella outbreak at a plant.

“We must take account the scale of this operation: more than 12-million boxes are affected,” he said, adding that distributo­rs would no longer have to sort through the produce to find the contaminat­ed powder. “They know that everything has to be removed from the shelves,” Besnier said.

Besnier, who was summoned to the French finance ministry on Friday, promised that all affected families would receive compensati­on.

He said that the consequenc­es of this health crisis for consumers including babies under six months, were uppermost in his mind. “It is for us, for me, a great concern,” he told the Journal du Dimanche.

Hundreds of lawsuits have been filed against the group by families who say their children got salmonella poisoning after drinking powdered milk made by the company.

So far, French officials have reported 35 cases of infants getting salmonella from the powder, while one case has been reported in Spain and another is being investigat­ed in Greece. An associatio­n representi­ng victims says the authoritie­s are underestim­ating the number of cases.

“There are complaints and there will be an investigat­ion with which we will fully collaborat­e. We never thought to act otherwise,” Besnier said. Lactalis, which was created in 1933 by Besnier’s grandfathe­r, has become an industry behemoth with annual sales amounting to about €17bn.

Two brands, Picot and Milumel baby milk, were the subject of chaotic internatio­nal recalls in mid-December after dozens of children fell sick.

The scandal deepened in January, when French investigat­ive weekly Le Canard Enchaine reported that state inspectors had given a clean bill of health to the Lactalis site in Craon, northwest France, in early September. They failed to find the salmonella bacteria that had been detected by Lactalis’s own tests in August and November that were not reported to the authoritie­s. The company said it was not legally bound to report the contaminat­ion.

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