Police make first UK arrests as Asda becomes latest supermarket
to be embroiled in crisis
A fraudulent meat trader in the south of France was the probable
source of horse meat in British Findus beef lasagne, the French
government said last night.
The French consumer minister, Benot Hamon, said that an official
investigation had uncovered "strong suspicions" that the Spanghero
company in Castlenaudary, in Languedoc, had mislabelled 750 tons of
Romanian horse meat as beef.
In the UK, the first arrests were made over the food scandal,
with police and the Food Standards Agency (FSA) swooping on two meat
plants suspected of slipping undeclared horse meat into burgers and
kebabs.
At the Farmbox Meats de-boning factory, near Aberystwyth, they
arrested Dafydd Raw-Rees, 64, the owner, and a second man aged 42.
In a simultaneous operation a 63-year-old man at the Peter Boddy
Slaughterhouse in Todmorden, West Yorkshire, was arrested and all
three were being questioned last night on suspicion of fraud.
The operation was disclosed minutes before Asda became the latest
major supermarket in Britain to be caught up in the crisis. It took
a 500g beef bolognese sauce off the shelves, the first time a fresh
beef product has tested positive for undeclared horse. Asda also
withdrew a 600g beef broth soup, 500g meat feast pasta sauce and a
400g chilli con carne soup as a "precaution".
Like many other developments in the scandal, the news was slipped
out shortly before 7pm. As the Government sought to reassure the
public, the FSA revealed that veterinary drug phenylbutazone,
"bute", had been found in eight out of 206 carcasses tested over
seven days this month.
The anti-inflammatory drug is linked to a rare blood disorder in
humans, but the Chief Medical Officer, Sally Davies, said that the
risk of ingesting a significant dose through horse meat is extremely
small. A human would have to eat hundreds of bute-tainted burgers in
a single day to receive a significant dose, she said.
The French investigators disclosed that more than 550 tons of the
meat were shipped to a factory in Luxembourg owned by the French
company Comigel, which makes frozen meals for Findus and a dozen
other European brands. Comigel had been "tricked", Mr Hamon said,
but should have checked the meat and accompanying documents more
rigorously.
Spanghero - founded by the brothers of one of France's greatest
rugby heroes, Walter Spanghero - was suspended last night from meat
trading. The French government plans to bring criminal proceedings
against the company which no longer has any connection with the
Spanghero family.
"The first elements of the investigation has shown that the
Romanian horse meat was first labelled as beef by Spanghero," Mr
Hamon told a press conference last night. "Our inquiries suggest the
company knew - or at least that there are strong suspicions they
knew - that they were selling horse meat as beef."
The investigation by the French consumer fraud agency has
uncovered documents suggesting that the mislabelling started
"several months" ago. It has cleared the Romanian abattoir of all
blame. The meat was exported from Romania and handled by a Dutch
trading company, based in Cyprus. So far, the French investigation
has found no documents to suggest the Dutch company, Draap Trading,
was complicit in the suspected fraud by Spanghero.
Mr Hamon believes the French company was guilty of "fraud for
economic gain". Spanghero later rejected the allegations. In a
formal statement, it said: "Spanghero reaffirms (that it) placed an
order for beef.. (that it) was led to believe that it received beef,
and sold back what it thought was beef."
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News Column
French Trader Is Prime Suspect in the Horse Meat Scandal
Feb 15, 2013
John Lichfield
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Source: (C) 2013 The Independent - London. via ProQuest Information and Learning Company; All Rights Reserved
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