http://www.indonesiamedia.com/2013/05/04/pasar-daging-china-penuh-dengan-daging-tikus/

Pasar Daging China Penuh dengan Daging Tikus
Posted on May 4 2013 by VOA / IM 


Polisi China berhasil membongkar sebuah sindikat kejahatan yang memberi label 
daging tikus sebagai daging kambing.

 
Konsumen China terguncang menyusul skandal terbaru yang melanda pasokan pangan 
negara itu – sebuah sindikat kejahatan yang memberi label daging tikus sebagai 
daging kambing.

Polisi China mengatakan mereka telah menangkap 63 orang yang diduga menjalankan 
penipuan menggunakan daging tikus dari Shanghai dan kota pesisir Wuxi.

Penangkapan itu merupakan bagian dari penumpasan atas daging palsu atau 
tercemar yang telah memicu penangkapan lebih dari 900 orang sejak akhir Januari.

Pihak berwenang juga menyita lebih dari 20.000 ton produk daging yang terbuat 
dari tikus dan mamalia kecil lainnya, dan juga daging yang tercemar bahan 
aditif dan zat kimia.

Banyak warga China melampiaskan kemarahan mereka di situs-situs media sosial 
seperti Sina Weibo.

This post was submitted by VOA / IM

++++

http://www.smh.com.au/world/chinese-diners-smell-a-rat-20130504-2izr1.html

Chinese diners smell a rat
  Date  May 5, 2013 

 
A woman sells pork at her stall. China has been rocked by a food safety scandal 
in which rats were being traded as other, more palatable meats. Photo: Reuters

Even for China's scandal-numbed diners, news that the lamb simmering in the pot 
might actually be rat took the country's endless outrages about food hazards 
into a new realm of disgust.

In an announcement intended to show that the government was serious about 
improving food safety, the Ministry of Public Security said on the internet on 
Thursday that police had caught traders in eastern China who bought rat, fox 
and mink flesh and sold it as mutton.

Sixty-three people were arrested and accused of ''buying fox, mink and rat and 
other meat products that had not undergone inspection'', which they doused in 
gelatin, red pigment and nitrates, and sold as mutton in Shanghai and adjacent 
Jiangsu province for about $1.6 million, the ministry said.

''How many rats does it take to put together a sheep?'' asked one typically 
baffled and angry user of Sina Weibo, China's microblogging service. ''Is it 
cheaper to raise rats than sheep? Or does it just not feel right unless you're 
making fakes?''

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The arrests were part of a nationwide operation since January to ''attack food 
safety crimes and defend the safety of the dining table'', the ministry said. 
Police arrested 904 people suspected of selling fake, diseased, toxic or 
adulterated meat, and broke up 1721 illicit factories, workshops and shops.

New York Times


Read more: 
http://www.smh.com.au/world/chinese-diners-smell-a-rat-20130504-2izr1.html#ixzz2SRox2aRS


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