Bush Wants To Allow Cooked, Packaged China Poultry Into US
Patricia Doyle, PhD 5-9-7
Hello Jeff -- Here it is, in black and white, US government is going to allow poultry from China:
"Government authorities are working on a proposal to allow chickens raised, slaughtered, and cooked in China to be sold in the United States, and under current regulations, store labels do not have to indicate the origin of the poultry."
The above statement could not be any clearer. For the sake of global trade and global economy, the US is going to allow imports as mentioned above.
The US consumer has NO WAY to know the country of origin of the poultry product. I guess that is clear. As the article mentions, the chicken is even cooked and packaged in China. No way to be sure it is free from bird flu either, except the word of our 'trustworthy' food supplier in China.
Again, WHY oh WHY are we allowing our enemy to feed us?
I tell you what WE consumers can do, "DO NOT BUY CHICKEN, ANY CHICKEN, BECAUSE WE DON'T KNOW IF IT CAME FROM CHINA.
We need to write letters to the FDA, Congress, every grocery store chains and also poultry companies like Tyson and Perdu, etc, and let them know we refuse to buy any chicken until the imports from China STOP!...and until the country of origin is on the label of the poultry package.
We still really do NOT know, for certain, that melamine was the source of the poison in the Chinese gluten. Yes, it may be part, but we do not know what other toxic dump chemicals were in the gluten.
If this continues, we may see people in the US buying their poultry at live markets and slaughtering the chickens themselves. As usual the consumer is getting stiffed, big time.
This must stop. I am not objecting to trinkets imported to the US from China, but I do strongly object to food from China. This must stop. Every bit of food imported to the US MUST be labeled with country of origin, and that includes products using ingredients from China and other countries.
Can you really trust our food supply?
Patty
US Proposal To Allow Chicken Imports From China Raises Health Concerns
By Diedtra Henderson
The Boston Globe
5-10-7
WASHINGTON -- In China, some farmers try to maximize the output from their small plots by flooding produce with unapproved pesticides, pumping livestock with
Antibiotics banned in other countries and using human feces as fertilizer to increase soil productivity. (Note - the same unregulated chemical pesticide and
Antibiotic abuses occur in Mexico and Latin America. The use of raw human sewage is also common and is often used to achieve 'organic' status in Latin American fruit and grain farming. -ed)
But the questionable practices do not end there: Chicken pens are frequently suspended over ponds where seafood is raised, recycling chicken waste as a food source for seafood, according to a leading food safety expert who served as adviser to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
Suspect Chinese agricultural practices could soon affect consumers in the United States. Government authorities are working on a proposal to allow chickens raised, slaughtered, and cooked in China to be sold in the United States, and under current regulations, store labels do not have to indicate the origin of the poultry.
According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, China's top agricultural export goal is opening the U.S. market to its cooked chickens.
Representative Rosa DeLauro, a Democrat of Connecticut who is fighting the change, says that China does not deserve entry to the coveted, closed poultry market.
Agricultural exports from China to the United States ballooned from $1 billion in 2002 to nearly $2.3 billion in 2006, according to the USDA Economic Research Service. DeLauro, head of an agricultural subcommittee in the House of Representatives, said Congress should signal its willingness to restrict imports from China until Beijing improved food safety oversight.
"There is deception," DeLauro said. "There is lax regulation, and they've got unsanitary conditions. They need to hear from us they're at risk. Congress has to look at limiting some of their agricultural imports."
The USDA, which shares food safety oversight with the FDA, says that its proposal to allow the sale of Chinese chicken is in the early stages and that there will be many opportunities for the public to be heard on the matter. Under the plan, any country seeking to export meat, poultry, or egg products to the United States must earn "equivalency," with documentation that its product is as safe and wholesome as the domestic competition.
Agriculture officials would review records, conduct on-site audits, and confirm that foreign laboratories could ensure the safety of the food, said Steven Cohen, a spokesman for the department's Food Safety and Inspection Service. The agency would also inspect imported products as they enter the United States, he said. "This is a process that has barely begun, and there is a very lengthy review," Cohen said.
According to Lucius Adkins, president of United Poultry Growers Association, the idea "should be strangled in infancy." The group represents more than 700 producers in Georgia, one of the leading U.S. poultry producing states.
"You don't know what conditions existed in that plant" in China, he said. In addition, no U.S. government representative in China would be watching poultry being slaughtered and processed, he said. "It's going to come here packaged."
The National Chicken Council, which represents companies that produce 95 percent of U.S.-grown poultry, has not taken a position on the proposal.
Currently, the United States imports almost no poultry, except for a small amount of chicken exported by Canadian producers, said Richard Lobb, a spokesman for the trade association.
But Americans do eat food from around the world, Lobb said.
"People don't have any problem with potpie from Canada. How they would feel about frozen chicken from China or specialty Chinese products that are canned or dried or something, I don't know."
In China's agricultural system, many farmers toil on one-acre plots, while U.S. farmers often work thousands of acres, said Michael Doyle, director of the Center for Food Safety at the University of Georgia and former chairman of the FDA's
Science advisory board.
In China, "there are hundreds of thousands of these little farms," Doyle said. "They have small ponds. And over the ponds - in not all cases, but in many cases - they'll have chicken cages. It might be like 20,000 chickens in cages. The chicken feces is what feeds the shrimp."
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has found that up to 10 percent of shrimp imported from China contains salmonella, he said. Even more worrisome are shrimp imported from China that contain
Antibiotics that no amount of cooking can neutralize.
Last month alone, the FDA rejected 51 shipments of catfish, eel, shrimp, and tilapia imported from China because of contaminants like salmonella, veterinary drugs, and nitrofuran, a cancer-causing chemical. A long history of such test results spurred the FDA to begin working proactively with Chinese farmers on safer seafood production methods, Doyle said. Even in poultry produced in the United States, there is contamination with salmonella, he said.
"In terms of veterinary drugs and pesticides, well, good food handling practices won't fix that," Doyle added. "That has to be addressed in the country of origin."
http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/05/09/sports/chicken.php
http://www.rense.com/general76/pooul.htm