Arab Times

Ikea pulls meatballs from EU nations after horsemeat found

Nestle dumps Spanish supplier after horse DNA test

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STOCKHOLM, Feb 25, (Agencies): Swedish furniture giant Ikea has withdrawn its own-label meatballs from sale in at least 16 European countries after Czech authoritie­s found horsemeat in the product, the company said Monday.

One-kilogramme (2.2-pound) bags from the suspect batch of frozen meatballs had been pulled from the shelves in Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Britain, Portugal, Italy, the Netherland­s, Belgium, Spain, Cyprus, Greece and Ireland, the company said.

Stores in Sweden, Denmark, France and Romania withdrew meatballs from sale as a precaution­ary measure. “We take this very seriously,” company spokeswoma­n Ylva Magnusson said. Ikea is the latest group to become caught up in a Europe-wide scandal over the presence of horsemeat in ready-made dishes that erupted in January when horse DNA was detected in beefburger­s in Britain and Ireland.

Swiss food giant Nestle said Monday it had stopped using a Spanish supplier after tests determined there was horse DNA in products supposedly containing pure beef.

“We have today been informed that our meatballs could contain traces of horsemeat, based on a test done in the Czech Republic,” Ikea said in a statement. “Our own tests haven’t shown any traces of horsemeat. We now obviously have to study this further,” it added.

The affected production batch had been pulled from shelves due to “customer concerns” but others remained on sale, the firm said.

Ikea said the meat in the product normally came from Sweden, Germany and Ireland but producers from other countries could be contracted when demand was especially high.

“During production peaks the meat could come from other countries,” Magnusson said. The company had given all its meat products the all clear after testing them for traces of horse two weeks ago.

“We are now double-checking this,” Magnusson said, adding that results from the second round of testing were expected by the middle of this week.

Ikea’s food division had 1.3 billion euros in revenue last year, according to its annual report. Sweden’s National Food Agency said it had been informed of the tests by Dafgaard, the company that produces the meatballs sold by Ikea in most European countries.

“They still don’t know the amount (of horsemeat) involved,” said Karin Cerenius, head of food control for the agency in the western region of Vaestra Goetaland.

The Czech veterinary watchdog, the State Veterinary Administra­tion (SVA), said on Monday it had found horsemeat in meatballs supplied to Ikea and in burgers made in Poland that were imported by Denmark-based food chain Nowaco.

Last week, Czech food inspectors ordered the Tesco chain to withdraw frozen “beef” lasagne containing horsemeat. It was manufactur­ed by the Tavola company in Luxembourg and imported and distribute­d by Nowaco.

They noted that horsemeat is sold for human consumptio­n in the country but that if not mentioned on the product label it was misleading to consumers and could lead to a fine of up to three million koruna (118,000 euros, $159,000).

 ??  ?? Photo shows meatballs at IKEA department store in Brno. Ikea pulls meatballs from 16 European countries after horsemeat was found in
the product by Czech authoritie­s. (AFP)
Photo shows meatballs at IKEA department store in Brno. Ikea pulls meatballs from 16 European countries after horsemeat was found in the product by Czech authoritie­s. (AFP)

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