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China executes former food and drug administration chief
By John Chan
20 July 2007
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In a cynical move aimed at shoring up the Made in China
brand name, Chinese authorities executed Zheng Xiaoyu, the former
head of the State Food and Drug Administration, on July 10 for
accepting 6.5 million yuan ($US850,000) in bribes from eight pharmaceutical
companies. He was accused of approving fake drugs and other substandard
items during his tenure from 1998 to 2005, including an antibiotic
that killed at least 10 people last year.
Just before Zhangs execution, one of his subordinates,
Cao Wenzhuang, was also sentenced to death for accepting $307,000
in bribes from two medical companies, but was given a two-year
reprieve for cooperating with the investigation. Four other drug
supervision officials were sentenced to prison terms of up to
life.
Zhengs crimes were undoubtedly grave, but the barbaric
decision to execute him was not out concern for consumer safety
or his victims. Rather Zheng provided a scapegoat to deflect attention
from the unregulated operation of the capitalist market in China,
rampant corruption at all levels of the Chinese bureaucracy and
investors, local and foreign, who routinely flout even the limited
rules governing everything from safety, hygiene and manufacturing
standards, to workers pay and conditions and environmental
safeguards.
Zhengs execution followed damaging revelations involving
Chinese products. Earlier this year, more than 100 brands of pet
food were pulled from US shelves after scores of dogs and cats
died from eating food tainted with the chemical melamine. Two
months ago a scandal erupted in Panama over cough syrup tainted
with diethylene glycol, an industrial solvent commonly used in
anti-freeze. At least 94 people are alleged to have died after
using it. In recent weeks, a number of countries in North America,
Europe, South America and Asia have recalled Chinese-made toothpaste
and other goods.
If it had not been for these scandals, Zheng might have been
treated far more leniently. He was first accused of corruption
and taking corporate bribes by one of his former colleagues some
six months after he retired in 2005. The official investigation
dragged on and Zheng was not charged under the criminal code,
but with breaching party discipline.
It was not until March this yearfollowing the death of
pets in the USthat the central leadership decided to expel
him from the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and hand him over to
criminal prosecutors. As international pressure started to mount,
the Chinese government accelerated the legal processes. An intermediate
court in Beijing sentenced Zheng to death on May 29 and his appeal
to a higher court was rejected two weeks later on June 12.
Due to the growing criticism of the large number of executions
in China, a new regulation was introduced this year requiring
the Supreme Peoples Court to approve all death sentences. But
the top court quickly upheld the sentence, condemning Zheng for
having seriously damaged the interests of the state and
people. His appeal for mercy on the grounds of making a
full confession and returning the bribes was rejected by the court
because the social impact [of his crimes] has been utterly
malign.
Even by Chinese standards, Zhengs punishment was swift
and brutal. Far bigger political criminals, such as ex-Shanghai
party secretary and Politburo member Chen Liangyu who was dismissed
last September for stealing hundreds of millions of dollars in
pension funds, are yet to face criminal charges. The provincial
leaders in Shanxi embroiled in a recent scandal over the widespread
use of slave labour in local brick kilns have, to date, faced
nothing more than criticism for neglecting duties.
Defending Chinese exports
The hurry to execute Zheng was a panicked response to international
concerns over Chinese-made goods. Beijing was particularly fearful
of moves by the Bush administration and sections of the US Congress
to seize on the issue to justify new protectionist measures.
Even as the pet food scandal erupted in March, Chinese officials
rushed to offer reassurances to members of the US Congress and
to play down the extent of the problem. The Chinese government
took the unusual step of consulting several public relations firms
to salvage consumer confidence at home and abroad in Chinese-made
goods. Chinese authorities shut down more than 180 food-processing
plants for health reasons and several dozen products were banned
for export.
The production of unsafe goods is just one consequence of the
unfettered operation of the market. As China has been transformed
into the workshop of the world, corporations across
the globe increasingly source products, components and ingredients
from China with scant regard for anything but cost and potential
profit. The lack of safeguards in China is compounded by the run
down of regulatory bodies and standards in the US and other countries.
The pet food scandal involved an ingredient, wheat gluten,
which was used by one of the largest US pet food companies, Menu
Foods. The wheat gluten was sourced from a biological technology
company, Xuzhou Anying, based in Jiangsu province, via a Las Vegas
company, ChemNutra, which specialises in importing products from
China. Xuzhou Anying apparently added melamine, an industrial
plastic, to the ingredient to make it appear high in protein.
The product was not tested in the US until the death of a number
of pets earlier this year. By the time American inspectors reached
China, Xuzhou Anying was closed. Commenting in the Washington
Post, William Hubbard, a former US Food and Drug Administration
(USFDA) official, warned: There but for the grace of God
go people. That same kind of contamination could have killed 4,000
or 5,000 people.
The Bush administration has run down the main regulatory bodythe
USFDA, which currently has only 625 field inspectors and is planning
to close seven of its 13 testing laboratories. According to statistics
from the non-profit Center for Science in the Public Interest,
the incidence of illnesses from contaminated produce more than
doubled between 1998 and 2004.
In China, unsafe and toxic foods and drugs have led to rising
public concern in recent years. Scandals ranged from the use of
cancer-causing dye to coloured egg yolks and fake milk powder
that killed several babies. Reports also surfaced of the use of
banned chemicals and complete disregard for basic hygiene procedures
in the food processing industry. Antibiotics have been widely
used in fish and pawn farms to keep the products healthy,
while rotten meat has been turned into ham.
The problem of food safety is so pervasive that the Chinese
military has raised concerns that bad food could undermine combat
capacity. Chinese authorities, which are commonly in collusion
with companies, have done little to change the situation. Some
110,000 Chinese workers lose their lives every year as a result
of industrial accidents. Fires and building collapses result in
more deaths due to inadequate enforcement of regulations. Industrial
pollution takes place on a large scale. So it is no surprise that
Chinas minimal regulations on food and medical safety are
routinely violated in the pursuit of profits.
Last Friday, Shao Mingli, the current head of State Food and
Drug Administration, warned manufacturers not to only go
after economic gain. He stated: Food and drug safety
is critical to the peoples health and lives, and is critical
for social stability and harmony. This issue can easily morph
into a much larger one and directly affect the image of local
governments and the state, affect social stability and harmony
as well as socioeconomic development.
The Chinese government is trying to blame the problems on small-scale
manufacturers. Some 80 percent of the countrys 450,000 food
companies have less than 10 employees and half of those inspected
had no proper licenses. There is no doubt, however, that bigger
Chinese companies are also involved. The main difference is that
they can afford to bribe government officials to grant the necessary
official approvals and documentation, as in the case of Zhang
Xiaoyus collusion with drug corporations.
Despite its own opposition to regulatory red tape,
the Bush administration wasted no time in using the scandals to
step up trade pressure on Beijing. US Commerce Secretary Carlos
Gutierrez warned Beijing last week to take the matter extremely
seriously. Charles Schumer, the leading congressional advocate
for punitive trade sanctions against China, called for the appointment
of an import tsar to oversee increasingly unsafe
imports from China.
Tensions between the US and China threaten to escalate. In
retaliation, Beijing has banned imports of US chicken and pork
products from Tyson Foods, the worlds largest meat processor,
and other American firms. Chinese food safety regulators have
allegedly found salmonella in frozen chicken from the US, demonstrating
that it is not only in China that the operation of the free market
is creating dangerous products for consumers.
See Also:
Sweatshop scandal puts black
mark over Beijing Olympics
[27 June 2007]
Slave labour scandal erupts
in China
[22 June 2007]
China's "pork crisis":
the capitalist market at work
[18 June 2007]
China passes private property
law for capitalist elite
[30 March 2007]
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