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    China defends food safety at Asian security summit
    19:04, Wednesday, August 01, 2007

    By John Ruwitch

    MANILA, Aug 1 (Reuters) - China's foreign minister was forced
    to defend the "made-in-China" label on Wednesday, as the safety
    of Chinese food dominated talks with western officials on the eve
    of Asia-Pacific's largest security summit.

    Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi told U.S. Deputy Secretary of
    State John Negroponte that Beijing did not want a string of
    recent health scares connected with its exports blown out of
    proportion.

    "We also oppose politicising the issue of Chinese products,
    and oppose trade protectionism and trade discrimination," Yang
    was quoted as saying by a foreign ministry spokeswoman.

    The United States stepped up inspections of imports from
    China after a chemical additive in pet food caused the death of
    pets there this spring.

    Since then, poisonous ingredients have been found in Chinese
    exports of toys, toothpaste and fish, while the deaths of
    patients in Panama were blamed on improperly labelled Chinese
    chemicals that were mixed into cough syrup.

    "China is willing to strengthen cooperation with the United
    States in quality testing, quarantine and inspection, and is also
    willing to promote with the United States the normal and smooth
    development of China-U.S. trade," Yang said.

    A U.S. delegation is visiting China this week on a
    fact-finding mission on food and drug safety and barely a day
    goes past without a new scandal or problem with food or drugs
    coming to light in China.

    Last month the U.S. Food and Drug Administration banned
    imports of Chinese farm-raised catfish, basa, shrimp, dace and
    eel unless their suppliers could prove they were free of certain
    veterinary substances, which pose no immediate health risk but
    could be a problem in the long run.



    NO RICE

    China has gained greater prominence at Thursday's ASEAN
    Regional Forum due to the absence of U.S. Secretary of State
    Condoleezza Rice.

    Climate change, counterterrorism and North Korea's nuclear
    programme are also high on the agenda at the gathering, which
    brings together the 10-nation Association of South East Asian
    Nations (ASEAN) with ministers from elsewhere in Asia, the United
    States, Russia, Canada and the European Union.

    But hopes of revving up progress on North Korea are muted in
    the absence of Rice, who is in the Middle East for talks on Iraq,
    and little beyond positive platitudes about recent progress has
    so far emerged from talks in the Philippines, which holds the
    rotating chairmanship of ASEAN.

    Ahead of the summit, countries discussed terror threats as
    well as responses to disasters and the outbreak of diseases in
    the region.


 
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