Ruminations

Blog dedicated primarily to randomly selected news items; comments reflecting personal perceptions

Friday, February 08, 2013

Dog chews from China? Contaminated again!

Recall targets antibiotics-laden pet treats

China, which has dispatched to the United States contaminated products ranging from toothpaste to computer chips, has done it again.

A report at Food Safety News confirms that both Milo’s Kitchen and Purina pet food companies are recalling chicken dog treats because of the unapproved antibiotics they contain.
Such problems have been reported before, and they make up just a small part of the list of contaminated or defective products found to have come from China, ranging from toys and kids jewelry to hammocks and carcinogen-laced food for people.

Food Safety News said the recalled products were Canyon Creek Ranch treats, Milo’s Kitchen Chicken Jerky and Chicken Grillers and Purina’s Waggin’ Train.

Traces of the disallowed antibiotics had been discovered by the New York Department of Agriculture, the report said. It said a similar problem was reported in 2011 when more than 1,000 pet owners reported their animals got ill after eating other chicken jerky treats make in China.

WND has reported extensively on such products from China, including last year when a Chinese pipeline supplying falsified driver’s licenses and IDs was shut down under pressure from several U.S. senators.

The move followed years of problems with products from China, which have ranged from fake electronics found in thermal weapons sights delivered to the U.S. Army and recycled computer chips to faulty hammock stands, toy castles with parts that could choke children, poisoned kids jewelry, exploding air pumps, oil-filled electric heaters that burn down homes and circular saws with faulty blade guards.

Food products that have created issues have included products tainted with pesticides, carcinogens, bacteria and banned drugs. China was found to be raising many of its fish products – intended for the U.S. – in water contaminated with raw sewage and then compensating by using dangerous drugs and chemicals, many of which are banned by the Food and Drug Administration.

The battle over driver’s licenses and the Chinese companies that apparently provide faked documentation to youth in the United States to use to elude age limits for drinking and other activities came to a head in 2012.

A major threat, however, from the activity is that terrorists could obtain documentation that might deceive many gatekeepers in the United States and give them access to operations or procedures that could be dangerous, according the Coalition for a Secure Driver’s License.

Organization President Brian Zimmer told WND that a terrorist who recently exploded a bomb in Bulgaria, an attack that killed seven, apparently was carrying a Michigan driver’s license, giving himself the status of an American tourist.

Ultimately, the document the bomber possessed was destroyed in the bombing, so the card was not examined.

But Zimmer said that situation is just one of many scenarios in which terror activities could be aided by easy access to fake documents that would fool authorities.

In the most recent case, Zimmer said Sens. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa; Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, Mark Kirk, R-Ill.; and Dick Durbin, D-Ill., wrote to the Chinese ambassador urging his nation to crack down on companies selling fake driver’s licenses.

‎WND also has reported previously extensively on fake or defective electronic components that could endanger U.S. military operations.

According to investigators, a Senate panel tracked some 1,800 cases of suspected counterfeit parts through the supply chain. It found that U.S. defense contractors had purchased many of the critical components from U.S. companies who, in turn, obtained them from Chinese firms but never subjected them to testing before handing them over to the U.S. military as part of their contract.
The Senate unit, whose investigators were denied access to Chinese firms by Chinese authorities, said the evidence “consistently point(s) to China as the epicenter of the global trade in counterfeits.”

To put the growing problem into perspective, Gen. Patrick O’Reilly, director of the U.S. Missile Defense Agency, said, “We do not want a $12 million missile defense interceptor’s reliability compromised by a $2 counterfeit part.”

The military aircraft that have been affected include the SH-60B, AH-64 and CH-46 helicopters; and the C-17, C-130J, C-27J and P-8A Poseidon airplanes. Investigators said if the component in the FLIR’s Electromagnetic Interference Filter, or EIF, had failed, then the FLIR itself would fail and the SH-60B could not conduct surface warfare missions, which included firing its Hellfire missiles.
A FLIR failure also would compromise the pilot’s ability to avoid hazards and identify targets at night, thereby limiting the SH-60B’s night mission capability.

WND columnist Phyllis Schlafly wrote two years ago about fake computer chips that were being purchased by the U.S. military for use in U.S. warplanes, ships and communications networks.
She wrote that malfunctions traced to the chips were being reported as early as 2005. Targeted were computers aboard U.S. F-15 fighter jets at Robins Air Force Base in Georgia.

Even at that point, officials said at least 15 percent of the spare and replacement chips the Pentagon was buying were counterfeit.

Officials in the National Intelligence Agency and the FBI expressed concern then that the fakes could let the Chinese gain access to secure systems inside the United States.

Schlafly wrote at the time: “The U.S. bought 59,000 counterfeit microchips from China for use in our warships, planes, missile and antimissile systems but fortunately were discovered they are fake in time. How many didn’t we catch?”

One Senate investigator even discovered that electronic components had been harvested from “e-waste” and sometimes were sold on public sidewalks and in public markets in China.
There also are whole factories in China with up to 15,000 people employed for the purpose of counterfeiting products.

WND has not been alone in its reporting. DefenseTech also reported on the danger: “You don’t have to be a genius to see the safety nightmare presented by fake parts on incredibly complex systems like submarines, fighter jets and tiltrotors.”

But WND’s reporting on the subject even has gotten the attention of China, when
the official Chinese news agency Xinhua blamed WND for over-hyping the safety issues about food and consumer goods.”

The Chinese news outlet specifically cited a story that sparked a wildfire of coverage by other media.
“For example, in May, the conservative news organ WorldNetDaily.com asked, ‘Is China Trying to Poison Americans and Their Pets?’” the Xinhua story states in trying to make the case for racism in the U.S. media.

It was the only example of negative news coverage mentioned.
On a related issue, WND has led the way in reporting on contaminated or defective consumer products coming out of China.

During a one-month period, 17 of 28 products recalled by the Consumer Product Safety Commission were Chinese imports.
They included:
  • Hammock stands that are unstable and cause those who use them to fall to the ground in alarming numbers: About 3,000 imported by Algoma Net Co. of Wisconsin and sold in Kohl’s, Target and other retail outlets have been called back. There have been at least 28 reports of brackets cracking or breaking and consumers falling to the ground.
  • Toy castles that could choke your young child: Some 68,000 Shape Sorting Toy Castles produced by Infantino were recalled after at least four reports of children nearly choking on colored beads that slid off the toy and lodged in their throats.
  • Kids jewelry that could poison them: About 20,000 Essentials for Kids Jewelry Sets have been recalled by the CPSC because of toxic levels of lead in the paint – a frequent problem with products from China.
  • Magnet toys that could perforate your child’s intestines: About 800 Mag Stix Magnetic Building Sets were recalled by the CPSC, which found the plastic sticks can be swallowed or aspirated. The agency found one 8-year-old girl was hospitalized after swallowing loose magnets. Extensive surgery was required to remove the magnets and repair intestinal perforations.
Other products found to have problems were portable baby swings that entrap youngsters, swimming pool ladders that break, faulty baby carriers that result in babies falling out and getting bruised, Easy-Bake Ovens that trap children’s fingers in openings, resulting in burns, oscillating tower fans whose faulty wiring results in fires, exploding air pumps, oil-filled electric heaters that burn down homes, notebook computer batteries that burn up computers and circular saws with faulty blade guards.

Found to have been contaminated in recent years are Chinese products ranging from pet food to seafood intended for humans.

A WND study showed the Food and Drug Administration found products intended for human consumption tainted with pesticides, carcinogens, bacteria and banned drugs.

Also, the deadly contaminant found in Chinese-made toothpaste – diethylene glycol – is a solvent used in antifreeze that killed 107 Americans when it was introduced in an elixir 70 years ago.
A resurgence in lead-poisoning cases in U.S. children was linked to Chinese imports – toys, makeup, glazed pottery and other products that contain significant amounts of lead and are being recalled by the CPSC on a regular basis.

Imports from China were recalled by the CPSC twice as often as products made everywhere else in the world, including the U.S., showed a WND study of 2007 government reports.

WND reported how China was shipping to the U.S. honey tainted with a potentially life-threatening antibiotic as well as adulterating exports with sugar.

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