Now, Nestle in dock for horsemeat scandal
BY Agencies20 Feb 2013 5:34 AM IST
Agencies20 Feb 2013 5:34 AM IST
The world's biggest food company, Swiss-based Nestle, and the world's top beef producer, JBS of Brazil, were Tuesday the latest in a long list of firms to be embroiled in Europe's spiralling horsemeat scandal.
Their involvement in the fast-moving drama marked another milestone in a scandal that has seen supermarket chains across Europe pull from their shelves millions of ‘beef’ products that are thought to contain horsemeat.
Nestle announced it was removing two ready-to-eat meals - beef ravioli and beef tortellini - from supermarket shelves in Italy and Spain after tests found traces of horse DNA in the products.
That brings to around a dozen the number of countries where tests have confirmed that horsemeat has been fraudulently passed off as beef.
Nestle said in a statement on Monday that the horse DNA was found in two products made with beef supplied by German firm HJ Schypke.
It said there was no food safety issue but the tainted products breached the one per cent threshold the British Food Safety Agency uses to indicate likely adulteration or gross negligence.
JBS of Brazil, which used HJ Schypke as a subcontractor, meanwhile said its Belgian branch would stop buying European meat ‘until confidence is restored in the European beef supply chain.’
It sought to distance itself from the scandal, saying in a statement on its website: ‘Schypke, a traditional German manufacturer of processed meat products, is not in any way part of the JBS Group.’
Their involvement in the fast-moving drama marked another milestone in a scandal that has seen supermarket chains across Europe pull from their shelves millions of ‘beef’ products that are thought to contain horsemeat.
Nestle announced it was removing two ready-to-eat meals - beef ravioli and beef tortellini - from supermarket shelves in Italy and Spain after tests found traces of horse DNA in the products.
That brings to around a dozen the number of countries where tests have confirmed that horsemeat has been fraudulently passed off as beef.
Nestle said in a statement on Monday that the horse DNA was found in two products made with beef supplied by German firm HJ Schypke.
It said there was no food safety issue but the tainted products breached the one per cent threshold the British Food Safety Agency uses to indicate likely adulteration or gross negligence.
JBS of Brazil, which used HJ Schypke as a subcontractor, meanwhile said its Belgian branch would stop buying European meat ‘until confidence is restored in the European beef supply chain.’
It sought to distance itself from the scandal, saying in a statement on its website: ‘Schypke, a traditional German manufacturer of processed meat products, is not in any way part of the JBS Group.’
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