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WSWS : News
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Dioxin contamination scandal hits Belgium
Effects spread through European Union and beyond
By Richard Tyler
8 June 1999
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Farms in Belgium have been ordered to destroy livestock that
were given animal feeds believed to be contaminated with dioxin,
a serious carcinogen. The European Union has ordered a complete
ban on Belgian agricultural exports of eggs, chickens, pork and
beef. All chickens and eggs exported after January 15 have been
ordered destroyed and this may be widened to include pigs, cattle
and other foods containing possibly tainted ingredients.
The contamination is thought to have come from tanks used to
hold animal fats employed in the production of various animal
feeds. The tanks were previously used to hold mineral and industrial
oil, thought to be the source of the dioxin contaminant. Failure
to sufficiently clean the tanks meant that the animal fats became
contaminated with the dioxin-bearing oil residues. The tainted
animal feeds were then supplied to hundreds of Belgian farms,
and were also exported to France, Holland and Germany. In another
case involving labelling and accounting fraud, the director of
the Ghent-based firm responsible for supplying the contaminated
animal feeds has been arrested and charged, along with other managers.
As well as a direct danger from livestock fed the contaminated
feed, eggs, poultry and other meats affected are used in a large
variety of processed foods. The crisis has started to affect jobs
in butchery and the slaughterhouses, with layoffs starting at
the end of last week looking set to widen.
The Belgian government has ordered the sealing off of about
1,000 farms believed to have given contaminated feed to farm animals.
Special containers were set up in public parks for the disposal
of products suspected of being tainted.
Belgian shoppers confronted empty shelves in shops and supermarkets
over the weekend as the ban on tainted goods took hold and stores
were ordered to withdraw suspect products. Many consumers were
forced to travel to neighbouring countries to complete their shopping.
The food crisis has precipitated a massive political crisis
inside Belgium on the eve of European and national elections.
Belgium's Minster of Health Marcel Colla and Minister of Agriculture
Karel Pinxten both resigned on June 1, as the scale of the scandal
became more widely known. They were bitterly denounced by many
for having kept information about the contamination secret for
several months.
The ministers come from the Socialist Party and Christian Democrats
that form the Belgian coalition government. It looks likely that
both parties will suffer at the polls next Sunday. The weekly
British business magazine the Economist writes, The
party that could do best out of voter disillusion at Belgium's
sloppy politicians is the far-right Vlaams (Flemish)
Blok.
Belgian consumers only became aware of the potential dangers
when the government ordered shops to stop selling Belgian eggs
and chickens last week. On June 2 the ban spread to the European
Union as a whole, when the European Commission's Veterinary Committee
ordered all poultry products from the suspect Belgian farms be
destroyed. Belgian shops and supermarkets that had cleared their
shelves of chicken and egg productsincluding fresh pasta,
cakes and mayonnaiseon June 3, had to remove even more foodstuffs
when it became clear that the contamination had also affected
pork, beef and possibly milk.
The Belgian press has highlighted the impact of the scandal.
Het Laatste Nieuws wrote, Total havoc. This is a
human and economic catastrophe. Our reputation abroad is ruined,
the agri-industry threatened, thousands of jobs in danger, companies
and traders in difficulty.
Belgium's main French-language daily Le Soir carries
a long list of banned foods, and foods that should be treated
with caution. These include poultry and eggs; all foods that contain
more than 2 percent egg such as mayonnaise, soups, bakery products,
cakes, biscuits, desserts; also foods containing pork and beef.
The newspaper comments that The dioxin crisis plunges
Belgium into a fog and complains about the lack of official
information, and contradictory reports forthcoming from the government
and the authorities last week.
After a ministerial meeting discussing the crisis broke up
at 11.30 p.m. on Sunday June 6, the prime minister still refused
to give a precise number of firms that had been placed on the
list of those affected by the contamination. Belgium has
had a weekend of uncertainty and suspicion. Consumers and businesses
sought reliable information but only very seldom found it,
Le Soir wrote.
The paper reports that a phone line established for worried
consumers took more than 10,000 calls on Friday, but had stopped
answering calls by Sunday. On a political level, the crisis
continues to make waves. According to the Flemish agricultural
organisation Boerenbond, the crisis will result in losses of approximately
1 billion francs [$25 million] a day for farmers and the country.
The total cost could exceed $700 million.
The French daily Libération writes, In
Belgium, the affair has taken on the dimensions of a national
catastrophe. The country's agriculture and food business is banned
throughout the entire world, including Asia and Africa.
The acting EU Farm Commissioner, Franz Fischler, severely criticised
the Belgian government for not informing EU officials about the
problem as soon as it was known. All food containing suspect ingredients
made since January 15 will have to be traced and destroyed. This
is a massive undertaking, given that most processed foods only
list the ingredients used, not the country of origin of every
individual constituent.
The European Union committee of veterinary experts met yesterday
to decide if Belgium has done enough to bring the crisis under
control. The EU Commission has already ordered the destruction
of millions of pounds worth of Belgian produce.
As well as the ban on Belgian agricultural exports within EU
itself, the number of countries banning Belgian produce now includes
Switzerland, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain,
Oman and Hong Kong, South Korea and Singapore.
The United States has banned the import of potentially contaminated
produce from the EU as a whole. This has caused bitter complaints
from some EU countries only marginally affected by the Belgian
events. The EU Commission called the US decision disproportionate.
The crisis is also causing political fallout beyond Belgium's
borders. Dutch Agriculture Minister Hayo Apotheker resigned on
June 7 following criticisms that he had not reacted quickly enough
to reassure Dutch consumers. Several hundred farms in Holland,
France and Germany have been placed under surveillance to check
if there has been a possible contamination. Over 300 pig farms
have been closed in the Netherlands, as they may have received
supplies of contaminated feed.
Belgian Prime Minister Jean-Luc Dehaene rushed back from the
summit of EU leaders in Cologne on Friday June 4 to deal with
the crisis. As in the case of BSE-infected British cattle, the
Belgian government's first priority has been to try and limit
the detrimental affects on their agricultural sector. Issues of
public health take second place. The new Agriculture Minister,
Herman Van Rompuy, said there were enormous economic consequences
and I fear also budgetary consequences.
See Also:
Damning testimony
in government inquiry into BSE crisis
[27 March 1998]
US study establishes link between dioxin
and cancer
[1 June 1999]
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