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A boy cries as he recuperates after surgery during "Operation Smile" at a hospital in Manila's Makati financial district October 26, 2009. Operation Smile aim to provide free surgery for about a hundred children inflicted with cleft lips, cleft palates, and other facial deformities over a period of five days in Makati.  REUTERS/Cheryl Ravelo

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    China told to stop blame game for product safety

    BEIJING
    Wed Oct 24, 2007 5:46am EDT
    Assistant Manager of Kinder Haus Toys Laura Grossi removes toys from the store's shelves in Arlington, Virginia, in this August 14, 2007 file photo. China should pay more attention to shoring up its product safety supervision network rather than apportioning blame for recent problems, a senior European Union official said on Wednesday. REUTERS/Jim Young/Files

    BEIJING (Reuters) - China should pay more attention to shoring up its product safety supervision network rather than apportioning blame for recent problems, a senior European Union official said on Wednesday.

    Health

    The quality of Chinese goods has come under international scrutiny following scandals involving products ranging from toothpaste and pet food to toys and fish.

    China insists the issue is limited to a few errant companies and hyped by foreign media as well as being driven by a protectionist agenda in some countries.

    Chinese deputy quality watchdog chief Wei Chuanzhong repeated that criticism of the press to European Commission Director General for Enterprise and Industry, Heinz Zourek, but the EU official said he thought action would be better than words.

    "I can assure you that the European Union is determined to draw conclusions out of these experiences that we have been witnessing. But we feel that we should concentrate our efforts on how to improve the system rather than blaming anybody," Zourek told Wei at a meeting in Beijing.

    "What we must not do is compromise on the safety, whatever the quality level. The products have to be safe," he added. "It is important to undertake measures, but it is equally important to have an efficient communication and alert system in place."

    China needed to better coordinate its own standards system to avoid duplication, Zourek later told a news conference, pointing out that imports of medical devices to China were checked by the quality watchdog as well as the food and drug administration.

    "One requires a re-registration every four years, the other every five years. They do it in different places," he said.

    In one of the largest safety scares, the world's biggest toy maker, Mattel Inc , recalled about 21 million of its Chinese-made toys in a span of five weeks, mainly because of excessive levels of lead paint.

    A senior Mattel executive later apologized to China for the trouble the recall had caused. Wei reassured Zourek that the government was taking the issue seriously.

    "Recently we have launched a corrective campaign to improve product and food quality and safety. Its scope and scale is unprecedented," he said.

    "The quality of the overwhelming number of our exports to the EU and United States is up to scratch. The Chinese government will strike hard against illegal practices," Wei added.

    Trade tensions have also soured Sino-EU ties of late. The EU is China's largest export market, but maintains a large and growing deficit.

    "We consider that the imbalances in our bilateral trade are becoming more and more visible," Zourek said. "Our exports going to China are smaller in size than our exports going to Switzerland, a country with about six million inhabitants."

    But he added that with 1.3 billion people, China could be a vast future market for the EU.

    "You can look at this with anxiety or with hope. I tend to hope, because ... we have a huge potential."



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