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Poisoned dumplings incident reveals fragility of Sino-Japanese
relations
By Carol Divjak
3 March 2008
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Sino-Japanese relations again plunged into mutual recriminations
after Japanese authorities announced on January 30 that 10 Japanese
citizens developed food poisoning symptoms after eating Chinese-made
frozen gyoza or dumplings during December and January. The affair
rapidly became a major diplomatic incident, even as Chinese President
Hu Jintao was planning to visit Japan in April.
Japanese authorities found an organophosphate pesticide, or
methamidophos, on the inner and outer sides of the gyoza packaging
and in the vomit of people poisoned by the dumplings. No pesticide
was found, however, in the fillings or the dough of the gyoza.
The pesticide levels were 400 times the allowable limit for vegetables
imported into Japan. Such a high level led experts to suspect
that the dumplings were deliberately contaminated. Methamidophos
is banned in Japan and was banned in China in 2004, but is reportedly
still in use.
Japans Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) government of Prime
Minister Yasuo Fukuda added fuel to the fire. Chief Cabinet Secretary
Nobutaka Machimura immediately told the media: Im
afraid there was rather loose safety awareness on the Chinese
side. On February 5, Health Minister Yoichi Masuzoe declared
he suspected the case was a deliberate poisoning,
and Japanese police said they were treating the case as attempted
murder.
The Japanese media frenzy was typified by the Yomiuri Shimbun
on February 1: In various parts of China large-scale food
poisoning caused by residual agricultural chemicals and other
substances has happened one after another. We have to question
whether China as a whole plays fast and loose with food safety.
The Japanese government recalled all products made by the manufacturer
of the poisoned dumplingsTianyang Food, based
in Chinas Hebei province. The recalls affected 606 public
schools, although no children have fallen ill. Many supermarkets
removed Chinese-made foodstuffs. Skylark Co., which owns more
than 4,000 restaurants, suspended the use of Chinese-made ingredientsalthough
none of them came from Tianyang.
China is Japans second largest source of food imports
after the US and accounts for over half the frozen products that
Japan imports. In a poll conducted by Kyodo news agency, 76 percent
of the respondents said they would not buy foods imported from
China. More than 4,000 people reported sickness of some sort after
eating Chinese-made dumplings, but most of the cases turned out
to be gastroenteritis. Psychologists indicated that extensive
media coverage had led to cases of autosuggestion,
with people mistakenly linking their discomforts to poisoning.
A Japanese investigation team that toured the Tianyang dumpling
plant founded it was clean, with no abnormality.
Nevertheless, Japan Tobacco, which owns Sojiz Foods Corp, the
importer of the dumplings, was forced to call off a proposed merger
with Nissin Food Products to form the largest frozen food importer
in Japan.
Beijing sought to downplay the incident by sending five Chinese
experts to Japan in early February in order to show its cooperation
with Tokyo. Chinese President Hu Jintao dispatched a senior envoy,
State Councilor Tang Jiaxuan, to Japan to express sympathy to
the victims.
Product safety has become a sensitive subject for Beijing,
following the revelations of Chinese-made toxic pet foods and
hazardous toys in the US last year. The Chinese government fears
that the reputation of its export industries, which employ tens
of millions of workers, could be damaged. In fact, the lack of
safety in Chinese-made products is largely the result of the worlds
giant corporations exploiting cheap labour and lax regulations
in that country.
Chinas General Administration of Quality Supervision,
Inspection and Quarantine (GASIQ) reported on February 22 that
two other allegedly contaminated batches of Chinese-made buns
and pork rolls in Japan came from two factories in China wholly
owned by the Japanese Nicky Food Company. Chinese authorities
said the factories might have bought substandard raw materials
from suppliers other than approved export farms.
Political tensions
While Japanese officials blamed China for the poisoned
foods, their Chinese counterparts did the opposite. In early February,
GASIQ deputy chief Wei Chuanzhong declared in a meeting with four
visiting Japanese investigators: A small group of radicals
who dont want to see Sino-Japanese friendship develop may
have taken extreme measures. Wei was pointing to the possible
involvement of right-wing activists in Japan.
A February 16 article in Yomiuri Shimbun attacked Weis
assertion, saying it did not appear to be based on any concrete
evidence. The newspaper reported that Japanese police believed
it highly likely that the pesticide was added during
manufacture or packaging in China because it was apparently difficult
to contaminate sealed dumpling packs being shipped to Japanese
retailers.
Last Thursday, Yu Xinmin, the top criminal investigator at
Beijings Ministry of Public Security, told a press conference
that the poisoned dumplings were sabotage but refused
to accept assertions by the Japanese police that it was highly
likely to have occurred in China. We have convincing
evidence supporting our conclusion and so do Japanese police.
The problem now is whose evidence is more scientific, objective
and reliable?
Yu then expressed regret that the Japanese police
were not cooperative. Japans National Police Agency chief
Hiroto Yoshimura responded: We have provided all documents
that we thought would be helpful to China, and I do not understand
why we have to hear the word regret.
While it remains unclear who poisoned the dumplings, extreme
nationalists can be found in both Japan and China. The Beijing
regime has been deliberately whipping up Chinese patriotism, primarily
through various anti-Japanese sentiments, in order to divert social
tensions. It is playing on a mixture of hostility to Japans
wartime atrocities and chauvinist prejudices toward Japanese people.
In 2005, this atmosphere erupted into a wave of anti-Japanese
protests among layers of middle-class youth in China.
Japans prime minister from 2001 to 2006, Junichiro Koizumi,
sought to revive Japanese nationalism and militarism. He repeatedly
visited the Yasukuni Shrine to honour Japans war dead and
approved history textbooks that whitewashed Japans wartime
record. In doing so, Koizumi also cultivated a reactionary constituency
among middle class layers. One purpose was to enable his government
to pass deeply unpopular legislation to circumvent the pacifist
clause in the Japanese constitution, which bans the use of military
force beyond self-defence.
Koizumi dispatched naval ships to the Indian Ocean to supply
the US-led war in Afghanistan in 2001. More controversially, he
deployed Japanese ground troops in a war zonein Iraqfor
the first time since World War II. His policy was designed to
strengthen the US-Japan alliance, inevitably provoking tensions
with China. His successors, Shinzo Abe and Fukuda, sought to improve
relations with Beijing, partly because of Japanese corporations
huge investments in Chinanow Japans largest trading
partner. Fukuda, who was critical of Koizumis visits to
Yasukuni, visited Beijing in December.
Fukudas maneuver does not represent a fundamental shift
from Koizumis policy. He came to office last October after
Abe resigned in the face of public opposition to renewing Japans
Afghan mission. Fukuda pushed the legislation through by overriding
the upper house dominated by the opposition Democratic Party of
Japan. Now Fukuda is facing the same falling public approval ratings
as Abe did. Fukuda is using the fear of poisoned Chinese
dumpling to shore up his government.
Sino-Japanese relations were already strained. On February
23, the eighth round of a top-level strategic dialogue
between the two countries failed to reach an agreement on disputes
over maritime demarcations and natural gas fields in the East
China Sea. Asked by the Financial Times whether the disputes
would be over soon, Japanese Foreign Minister Masahiko Koumura
replied: I am not necessarily all that optimistic.
The Asahi Shimbun reported in January that Chinese bombers
made 40 sorties in air space over the disputed Chunxiao gas field
(known as Shirakaba in Japan) in the East China Sea in September
2007. Japanese fighter jets were scrambled 12 times. Japanese
military experts said Chinas provocative actions
were aimed not only at claiming the gas field. The waters around
Chunxiao are also used by US fleets stationed in Japan. A Japanese
analyst, Kensuke Ebata, told Asahi the Chinese military
regarded entire areas, from Okinawa and the Philippines to Taiwan,
as the first line of islands in any conflict in the
Pacific. Based on this strategy, the Chunxiao gas field was part
of Chinas inland seas.
Anxiety in Japanese and American ruling circles about the rise
of China was displayed at a China Symposium held in
Tokyo on January 23, organised by the Keizai Koho Center and the
US Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
Robert Madsen, a senior fellow of the MIT Center for International
Studies, likened Sino-Japanese relations to those between Germany
and France from the late nineteenth century until 1945, when they
fought a series of wars for the domination of Europe. He pointed
out that Germany was only willing to cooperate with France after
it was defeated in World War II. The equivalent time for
Japan would have been 15 or 20 years ago, when Japan was much
more powerful relative to China. Now China sees no reason
to bow to Japan. Professor Takashi Shiraishi of Japans National
Graduate Institute for Policy Studies cited a statistic: in 1995,
8 of the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
(ASEAN) had more trade with Japan than with China. By 2005, that
number was only two.
At the conference, the US ambassador to Japan, Thomas Schieffer,
warned: The old order [in Northeast Asia] is changing and
no one is quite sure how they will fit in when it is over.
While pushing for a stronger US-Japan alliance, Schieffer declared:
We must continually remind the Chinese that we are not trying
to contain them. These assurances are unlikely to prevent
China continuing to seek its own alliances, particularly with
Russia. The diplomatic row over poisoned dumplings
may eventually recede, but it reflects ongoing great-power tensions.
See Also:
Wen's visit fails
to end Sino-Japanese tensions
[23 April 2007]
Japan-Australia security
declaration strengthens US encirclement of China
[23 March 2007]
Anti-Japanese protests
and the reactionary nature of Chinese nationalism
[29 April 2005]
Behind China-Japan
tensions
Washington fuels Japanese militarism--Part Two
[26 April 2005]
Behind China-Japan
tensions
Washington fuels Japanese militarism--Part One
[25 April 2005]
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