With more than 60% of chickens in the UK infected with a food poisoning
bug, you might have expected the UK’s food safety watchdog to be tightening up
inspections. Instead they are allowing the meat industry to inspect their own poultry,
akin to paying students to mark their own exam papers.
Since 1994, the FSA at the behest of the meat industry has been
deregulating the independent inspection of poultry. 37 of the
87 poultry plants throughout the UK have employed their own meat
inspectors and the FSA’s latest plans will finish the job.
This comes after the Scottish Parliament approved the visual only
inspection of pigs, bringing Scotland in line with the rest of the UK. This
means tumours and abscesses will be minced into the sausages and pies we eat.
The meat industry lobby works here as well!
Meat inspectors across Europe have warned that the latest
measures would place public health in grave danger. According to FSA
figures, more than 60% of chickens in the UK are infected with the
campylobacter food poisoning bug, which on average kills 110 people each
year and results in 22,000 people being treated in hospital. As we highlighted
last month, the FSA was heavily criticised for backtracking on a
decision to 'name and shame' retailers and abattoirs during a year-long testing
programme on retail chicken for campylobacter.
This is all in addition to food fraud, another issue the FSA has ducked.
Food mis-labelling is widespread, as is the practice
of substituting premium commodity products in whole or in part with cheaper
ingredients.
Giving the industry carte blanche to inspect its own
products is yet another cynical attempt at privatisation which would save
the industry money at the expense of public safety. Nobody should have to worry
about eating food containing tumours, faeces, abscesses and other
contaminants.
There has been no consultation in Scotland or the rest of the UK over
these plans. Official controls currently in place to protect consumers from
eating contaminated meat, cost each person in the UK just 38p per year. A
small price to pay for safe food.
Many experts in this field believe that the FSA has been captured by the
meat industry. In June this year, I gave evidence to the Scottish Parliament's Health Committee on the Food (Scotland) Bill that
will create Food Standards Scotland. I highlighted the work of Scottish meat
inspectors in preventing over a million instances of diseased animal carcasses
from entering the food chain. The FoI data we released included 100,000 chicken
tumours. I said, "This shows what a vital job meat inspectors do. We are
calling on the Scottish Government to ensure that Food Standards Scotland is
focused on safety of consumers not food industry profits. Meat inspectors and
vets must be able to carry out thorough independent inspections, free from food
industry influence."
This latest plan shows that the FSA, as currently constituted, has
abandoned the consumer. When the Food (Scotland) Bill is debated at Stage 1 in
the coming weeks, MSPs should ensure that the new Scottish organisation puts
food safety before profits. Meanwhile, everyone in the UK is at risk.
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