Home China Tours Yangtze Cruises China Hotels Reservation About Us Terms Contact Us Feed Back
China Brief
China Guide
Tourism Cities
Landscape
Travel Festival
Super Value Tours
Yangtze Cruises Tours
Adventure Tours
Asia Culture Tours
Jewish History Tours
Special Interest Tours
Deluxe Tours
Customized Tours
Great Wall Marathon Tours
Mini-Package
-

Health Matters

Canadian Beef Sparks Mad Cow Concerns

  Animal health supervision officers of Beijing confiscated 60 cartons of beef imported from Canada over fears of mad cow disease.

During a recent inspection tour of a warehouse at Yuquanying near the southern third ring road, workers from the Beijing Animal Health Supervision Institute found a wholesale businessman, identified by his surname as Ma, stored 60 cartons of beef imported from Canada.

The cartons of beef, weighing more than 2,000 kg and marked with the label "produced in 2005 and 2006," have a market value of 200,000 yuan (about US$25,000), the Beijing Times reported.

Due to an outbreak of mad cow disease, the Chinese Ministry of Agriculture and the State Administration of Quality Supervision and Quarantine has banned direct or indirect import of beef from Canada since May 22, 2003.

Because Ma violated both this decree and the relevant stipulations in Animal Epidemic Prevention Law of China, the beef must be confiscated and destroyed, said the supervision officers. Animal health supervision officers also seized beef imported from Brazil in a separate investigation tour made on Dec. 15, 2006 to the same warehouse.

The animal health supervision officers pledged to tighten their investigations in the future and make sure that all processed animal products in the city are safe to consume.



See more about Health Matters

  About Health Matters
. Advisor Proposes Birthday of Bethune
. Food Poisoning Deaths Decline
. Official: Guangdong Not the Source of Bird Flu
. Tibetan Poultry Tests Positive for Bird Flu
. China Introduce New Bird Flu Measures Ahead of Spr
. Smoking to Be Strictly Prohibited in HK
. Bird Flu Patient Remains Critical As WHO Officials
. Bird Flu Survivor¡¯s Serum Used as Treatment
. Rabies Kills 61 in Hunan
. Police Deaths Raise Health Concerns
. Chinese Political Advisors Call for Stringent Food
. Cancer Rates in Tianjin Rise Sharply in 20 Years
. Think Tank Shows Concern over Medicare System
. Yunnan Sets up AIDS Prevention, Control Bureau

For payment, trip cancellation, please refer to the Terms & Conditions
For more information, please feel free to contact us at 1-800-865-6221 or email to us at info@chinacustomtours.com

TOP

More about Health Matters
. Health Matters
More about China Guide