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Re: O. T.--Looking for a photo


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Posted by Walt Davies on September 18, 2007 at 09:19:53 from (75.106.197.9):

In Reply to: O. T.--Looking for a photo posted by Jim in NC on September 18, 2007 at 05:22:19:

I found this on the web but no pictures. Reminds of the Jumping frog of Calavaras county by Mark Twain only he used lead shot.

Walt.
-------------------------------------------
Chinese pigs force-fed wastewater
July 2007

U.S. Water News Online

BEIJING, China -- Beijing police recently raided a village where live pigs were force-fed wastewater to boost their weight before slaughter, state media reported.

Plastic pipes had been forced down the pigs' throats and villagers had pumped each 220-pound pig with 44 pounds of wastewater, the Beijing Morning Post reported.

Paperwork showed the pigs were headed for one of Beijing's main slaughterhouses and stamps on their ears indicated that they already had been through quarantine and inspection, the paper said. Suspects escaped during the raid and no arrests were made, it said.

The case underscored China's chaotic food safety situation, where manufacturers and distributors often use unapproved additives, falsify expiration dates or find other methods of cutting corners to eke out small profits.

Officials have in recent weeks underscored the need to tighten up inspections, punish violators and increase surveillance.

Wei Chuanzhong, deputy director of the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine, said local governments "should be fully aware of the importance and improve responsibility for imported and exported food safety."

His remarks, made during an inspection tour of the port city of Tianjin, were posted on the administration's Web site.

Earlier this week, inspectors announced they had closed 180 food factories nationwide in the first half of this year and seized tons of candy, pickles, crackers and seafood tainted with formaldehyde, illegal dyes and industrial wax.

"These are not isolated cases," Han Yi, an official with Wei's quality administration, was quoted as saying in the state-run China Daily newspaper.

Han's admission was significant because the agency has said in the past that safety violations were the work of a few rogue operators -- a claim aimed at protecting China's billions of dollars of food exports.


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