The Star Malaysia

Australia to revive confidence in strawberri­es

Tighter export controls and tamper-proof packs mulled

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SYDNEY: Australian shoppers need to back farmers besieged by a contaminat­ed fruit scare, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said, as it emerged Singapore’s largest supermarke­t chain had put a halt on all strawberri­es from Down Under.

Morrison outlined tighter export controls as the crisis – which has seen pins and needles inserted into fruit across the country – spread further overseas.

The PM detailed several government-backed measures to restore confidence in the industry, including funding to review tamper-proof packaging options, and the recent introducti­on of X-rays and shrink wrapping on exports.

“There’s work also being done to support communicat­ions up through the supply chain into our internatio­nal markets,” he told reporters at a farm in the northeast state of Queensland.

The industry is reeling as a string of incidents over the past few weeks – many of them a copycat hoax – have unnerved grocery-shoppers and have police struggling to find the original offender.

The crisis has spread overseas too. Last week a needle turned up in a punnet of Australian strawberri­es in New Zealand. And yesterday, NTUC FairPrice, in Singapore confirmed it had put a halt on all strawberry imports from Australia from Sept 24 as a “precaution­ary measure”.

“We continue to monitor the situation closely, and our food safety protocols and procedures

Whoever the idiot was who started this, his idiocy has been overwhelme­d by the good nature of Australian­s who have stood with our farmers. Scott Morrison

are also in place should we need to recall any products, in compliance with the authoritie­s’ advisories,” a FairPrice spokesman said.

But while many farmers have been brought to the brink, it has also set off a backlash against the saboteurs, with Australian­s buying strawberri­es en masse.

“That shows you what’s happening in Australia: Australian­s coming together and responding to a call to say, ‘Let’s get behind our strawberry farmers,”, Morrison said.

“Whoever the idiot was who started this, his idiocy has been completely overwhelme­d by the good nature of the Australian people who have stood with our strawberry farmers.”

Canberra has notified internatio­nal markets that since Sept 19 Australian exporters are required to give assurance that their strawberry shipment is free of metal contaminan­ts.

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