China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Online food-ordering sites face probe

- ByWANG XIAODONG andMENGJIN­G Contact the writers at wangxiaodo­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

Three major online meal-ordering platforms pledged to intensify their oversight of businesses operating on their platforms to wipe out food safety problems.

Tang Yunhua, deputy head of Beijing Food and Drug Administra­tion, announced onWednesda­y that authoritie­s would investigat­e alleged violations by the platforms— waimai.meituan.com, ele.me and waimai.baidu.com — which it said had failed to inspect certificat­ions of hosted businesses and make the results public.

The administra­tion also published a list of 60 restaurant­s running on the platforms that lack proper certificat­es or permits. The list included chain restaurant­s owned by popular brands, including two Xibei restaurant­s, which specialize in dishes from Northwest China, threeKFCre­staurants and one Subway. All the restaurant­s are located in Beijing. echoed

In a statement provided to China Daily on Thursday, Baidu said it has set up an investigat­ion team and suspended the online business of all the restaurant­s exposed by the Beijing FDA. It said it will conduct a thorough inspection of those restaurant­s, both online and offline, along with a review of all restaurant­s registered on the platform.

Waimai.baidu.com, Baidu’s online meal-ordering platform, began displaying the certificat­ions and sanitary informatio­n of all restaurant­s in Beijing that use the platform on Wednesday evening, the statement said.

The informatio­n to be made public includes a company’s licenses and permits, as well as certificat­ion of sanitary conditions in the restaurant­s as graded by the Beijing FDA, so consumers can make good decisions when choosing online restaurant­s, it said.

More than 1,000 online restaurant­s on the platform were closed by the end of May after

on three major meal-ordering platforms were found without proper certificat­es or permits.

they were inspected, including 286 registered in Beijing, the statement said.

Wang Bicong, a food-safety supervisor atMeituan, said on Wednesday that all restaurant­s using its online meal ordering platform, waimai. that were improperly operating have been closed.

Over the past 10 months, the platform has refused registrati­on applicatio­ns from 74,000 businesses across China, and has closed more than 9,000 business on the platform for failing to pass inspection­s, including nearly 2,000 business registered in Beijing, Wang said.

Ele.me said it had closed all online restaurant­s involved in the case and will conduct inspection­s of the platform, according to a report by news portal jiemian.com.

Tang, of the BeijingFDA, said the administra­tion will regularly publish the names of online meal-ordering restaurant­s found to have violated foodsafety regulation­s, and all online meal-ordering platforms that fail to inspect the certificat­es of restaurant­s running on theirplatf­ormswillbe­subjectto the maximum fine — 200,000 yuan ($30,100), as specified in China’s Food Safety Law.

Registered meal-ordering customers in China reached 150 million in June, according to the China InternetNe­twork Informatio­n Center.

Maximum fine formeal-ordering platforms that fail to verify the certificat­es of restaurant­s

 ?? YIN YAFEI / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? An outdoor sign for a restaurant in Chaoyang district, Beijing, that had no certificat­e is taken down on Monday.
YIN YAFEI / FOR CHINA DAILY An outdoor sign for a restaurant in Chaoyang district, Beijing, that had no certificat­e is taken down on Monday.
 ??  ?? Li Lei
Li Lei

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