The Herald (South Africa)

Embattled dairy chief breaks silence

Recalls in 83 countries as Lactalis group boss vows compensati­on for salmonella victims

- Joe Schmid

THE chief executive of France’s Lactalis group yesterday vowed compensati­on for victims of salmonella-tainted baby milk as he revealed recalls were under way in 83 countries. Giving his first interview in nearly 20 years, Emmanuel Besnier, who heads the family-controlled company, told the Journal du Dimanche newspaper that the recall involved more than 12 million packages of Picot, Milumel, Celia and other brands of powdered baby milk.

“We are going to draw the lessons from this crisis and set out an even stricter hygiene framework, in collaborat­ion with the authoritie­s,” he said. Asked why he had not publicly addressed parents’ concerns as worries about the outbreak intensifie­d, Besnier said: “It’s true, by nature I’m not very forthcomin­g.

“In a crisis like this, we act first, and perhaps I didn’t take the necessary time to explain things.”

A total of 37 babies had fallen ill in France, health authoritie­s said on Friday, along with a case in Spain and a suspected case in Greece, but Besnier said no new cases had been reported since December 8, a week after the recall was announced.

“The case in Spain goes back to October,” he said, referring to the two cases outside France reported on Friday by the Eurosurvei­llance medical journal.

Besnier’s interview included two of the first public photograph­s of the secretive leader in years, at the Lactalis headquarte­rs in Laval, western France.

It came after Finance Minister Bruno le Maire summoned Besnier to a meeting on Friday, in which the chief executive agreed to pull from store and pharmacy shelves all products from the Craon factory where the outbreak was found, instead of those dating back to February.

But Besnier did not appear with Le Maire at a media conference after the meeting, despite calls by several government officials for him to face the public.

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

But Besnier, 47, denied claims by an associatio­n of victims’ families that Lactalis had lied about the dates and number of stocks affected by the salmonella outbreak.

“This is false. I don’t know what this claim is based on,” he said. “At no point was there any intention of hiding things.”

Besnier defended, however, not informing authoritie­s that internal tests had discovered salmonella on a broom and on the tiles of a dehydratio­n tower at the Craon factory in August and November.

“For us, these ‘environmen­t’ tests are an alert to make sure we keep the bacteria far from the product,” he said, adding that authoritie­s would have been alerted only if bacteria were found in the powdered milk.

Created in 1933 by Besnier’s grandfathe­r, Lactalis has become an industry giant with annual sales of ß17-billion (R256-billion), making it the world’s third-largest dairy group, behind Danone and Nestle.

The scare has cast a harsh spotlight on a company little known to the public, despite employing 15 000 people in France.

Meanwhile, France yesterday welcomed Lactalis’s pledge to compensate victims, but said a judicial investigat­ion to determine who was responsibl­e would continue.

“Paying compensati­on is good, but money cannot buy everything,” government spokesman Benjamin Griveaux said in an interview on BFM TV.

“It is the job of the investigat­ion to determine where failings occurred and who is to blame.” – AFP, with additional reporting by Richard Lough, Reuters

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