China gives delicious, nutritious food aid
17/1/2005 7:30
The Chinese government attaches great importance to food safety and never
provided expired food to tsunami-hit countries, said Ministry of Commerce
spokesperson Chong Quan yesterday. Chong said some Indonesian media recently
reported that food China provided to tsunami-affected areas in Indonesia had
"expired" or was "inedible." The media also aired a close-up shot of the
date "2004.12.10" on a food package. According to China's Law on Production
Quality and Law on Food Hygiene, food packages must mark the production date and
safe consumption period. The production dates on food aid donated by China
are legal according to Chinese law, Chong said. According to Chong, the rumor
was spread by individuals with ulterior motives, who took advantage of the
difference in food packaging between China and other countries. The
tsunami-affected people can not recognize Chinese characters, Chong
added. The purpose was to cause trouble and mislead Indonesians. It is very
evil, Chong said. Meanwhile, donations from Chinese people amounted to 280
million yuan (US$33 million) through Saturday, sources with the Ministry of
Civil Affairs said. The China Charity Federation sent US$6.65 million in
non-governmental donations on Saturday to 11 tsunami-stricken
countries. Meanwhile, a Chinese cargo plane carrying 50 tons of relief goods
landed at Medan airport, North Sumatra, on Saturday. The relief goods, mainly
medicine, generators and tents, were worth 7.5 million yuan. A third batch of
Chinese relief aid to Sri Lanka arrived the same day.
Xinhua
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