China risks damaging its global credibility if it does not tackle its food and drug quality problems, an official newspaper said on Monday in a rare admission amid a series of health scares over tainted products.
China’s safety failings have drawn world attention since mislabelled chemical exports were found in cough syrup in Panama and pet food in the United States. There have been a series of recalls and bans on items ranging from toys to toothpaste.
In one of the most recent, the US Food and Drug Administration said it would not allow imports of Chinese farm-raised seafood unless suppliers could prove the shipments held no harmful residues.
”The food security problems have impeded Chinese agri-products and food many times in international trade, and damaged our national credibility and image,” Sun Xianze, director of food safety coordination at the State Food and Drug Administration, said at a weekend seminar.
”Our country is facing a period with high risks for food safety,” he said, according to the English-language China Daily.
Dealing with these problems was being hampered by indolent and irresponsible officials and companies, admitted administration head Shao Mingli in a statement on its website.
”In some regions, rectification work is carried out without energy and the quality of work does not come up to standard: it is perfunctory and sluggish,” he was quoted as telling the meeting.
”Some drug production and sale companies put their faith in luck, hesitate and take a wait-and-see attitude and are slack in their work.”
The watchdog revoked the production licences of five drug manufacturers in the last year and withdrew good manufacturing practice certificates from 128 others, the paper added.
The companies shut down included Qiqihar Number Two Pharmaceutical Company, following the deaths of 11 people after they took a drug it manufactured.
The government is intensifying inspections to weed out substandard drugs, the China Daily added, as ”many thousands” have to be re-licensed this year.
”We cannot let fraudulently obtained licences get re-registered and be cloaked in the coat of legality,” it said.
In the last year, the regulator rejected 1 437 licence applications for not complying with ”technical requirements”, said the newspaper, the Communist Party’s mouthpiece.
China has been meting out stern treatment to officials implicated in drug safety scandals. Former drug watchdog chief Zheng Xiaoyu was sentenced to death for taking bribes in May.
Eighty-three people have died in Panama after taking medicines contaminated with a Chinese-made toxin last year and the death toll is expected to rise, a senior Panama prosecutor said on Thursday. – Reuters