icScotland - Fears over horse meat scandal scale
icScotland logo
icScotland News Sport icHomes
Search icScotland for:
Today's UK news
News  UK  Today's UK news  Article

Fears over horse meat scandal scale

04:05, Feb 11 2013

 

Environment Secretary Owen Paterson will update MPs on the horse meat scandal after warning that the next set of tests could produce more bad results.

Mr Paterson's Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) has sought to play down any concerns that the scandal could pose a health risk and said there is "no reason for people to change their shopping habits".

But there are fears that the full scale of the scandal has yet to emerge. The Environment Secretary said the Government was powerless to impose a ban on meat imports unless beef contaminated with horse meat is found to be a health risk.

Mr Paterson spoke after the chair of the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Select Committee backed a ban on meat imports and urged the public to buy their meat locally.

Conservative MP Anne McIntosh said: "I believe there should be a moratorium on the movement of all meat until such time as we can trace the source of contamination." But shadow environment secretary Mary Creagh said banning meat imports was a "knee-jerk reaction".

The Food Standards Agency (FSA) has said there is no evidence to suggest the horse meat detected in beef products poses a danger to humans, but confirmed that tests have been ordered for the veterinary drug phenylbutazone as animals treated with "bute" are not allowed to enter the food chain.

Frozen foods firm Findus, which has taken its beef lasagnes made by French food supplier Comigel off shelves after some were found to have up to 100% horse meat in them, said it was considering taking legal action against its suppliers as an internal investigation "strongly suggests" that the contamination "was not accidental".

Mr Paterson said no case for criminal action has been discovered in the UK yet but the FSA said it was "working closely" with police in case that changes.

The scandal has spread all over the continent as details of the elaborate supply chain in the meat industry emerge. French consumer safety authorities have said companies from Romania, Cyprus and the Netherlands as well as its own firms were involved.

Romanian authorities have confirmed they are investigating. One theory for the apparent increase in the presence of horse meat in the food chain is new restrictions on using horses on roads in Romania, which have led to a surge in numbers of animals being put down.

 
Lagarde quizzed over pay-off deal
Family tribute to murdered soldier
Prayers offered for Woolwich victim
£36.6bn wiped off value of FTSE 100
Neet numbers 'lowest for decade'
Mother guilty of benefit fraud
Four held over soldier's murder
12-year sentence for sex abuse GP
Queen gets pregnancy tips on visit
Tributes to terror victim soldier
Mother guilty of benefits fraud
GP jailed for filmed sex assaults
Lagarde faces court in fraud probe
Queen tours 'Nobel Prize factory'
Groups condemn 'un-Islamic' attack
Soldier killers known to security
Pair jailed for gangland murder
Police chief defends response time
Bridger 'cannot recall April moves'
Solider killers known to security
Top Top

Back Back

E-mail this article to a friend

Printable VersionPrintable version

 
News  UK  Today's UK news  Article
 


Copyright and Trade Mark Notice
© owned by or licensed to Scottish & Universal Newspapers Limited 2013.
icScotland™ is a trade mark of Scottish & Universal Newspapers Limited.
Please read our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Statement before using this site.

 
Advertisements
 
Jobs in Scotland: