|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Belgium
Legal action over dioxin poisoning in Belgium
Coca-Cola products hit by new contamination scandal
By Richard Tyler
19 June 1999
Use
this version to print
The European Union is poised to take legal action against the
Belgian government for its handling of the dioxin poisoning affair.
EU Farm Commissioner Franz Fischler said the case went beyond
Belgium's failure to provide a timely warning to other EU states
about the potential hazard from dioxin-contaminated animal feeds
and food products.
The EU Commission ordered a four-day inspection tour between
June 8 and 11 to investigate the dioxin contamination and the
Belgian government's handling of it. The preliminary report by
the nine inspectors, accompanied by two other scientific experts,
has produced damning evidence of complacency and cover-up by the
Belgian authorities. They have also found a criminal disregard
of health and safety regulations by companies operating in the
animal feed supply industry.
The inspectors' report accuses the Belgian authorities of dragging
their feet before taking stock of the size of the problem.
This was compounded by a lack of information, or indeed misinformation,
provided to consumers and the EU bodies responsible for health
and agriculture.
They state, The source of the dioxin contamination in
Belgium is still not clear. Both hypotheses on how the contamination
of the fat at the beginning of the feed chain may have occurred,
whether by a leak in the heating system or by a mistake during
the collection of oils therefore, have to be maintained.
The inspectors also point to the fact that the protective
measures taken by the Commission against the dioxin contamination
are still not being fully applied [in Belgium]. The inspectors
also noted shortcomings in the control of the feed production
chain and criticised the general co-ordination and the information
flow of the Belgian authorities which led to a great confusion
among consumers.
Belgian daily Le Soir reports, The lack of a reaction
by the authorities to the news of the contamination on April 26
involved a considerable waste of time lasting several weeks.
No crisis centre was set up to deal with the problem. Once the
general public began to become aware of the potential health dangers,
the arrangements announced were fragmented, incomplete and
sometimes contradictory, evolving by the hour, without any perceptible
guidelines, Le Soir writes. The authorities were
overtaken by events, which generated total confusion
for the consumer.
Their inspection has revealed serious omissions, in particular
concerning the implementation of community [EU] measures regarding
the use of animal waste.
The preliminary report points to two probable causes of the
dioxin contamination. First, a leak in an oil-fired heating system
could have allowed heating oil to escape into the circuits used
for the production of animal fats at the plant run by Verkest.
It is certain that at least an equal quantity of heating
oil contaminated greases, without these being withdrawn from the
circuits used to manufacture feed-stuffs. The oil was of a type
authorised until the end of the 1960s which could contain PCB,
and consequently dioxins.
Second, Verkest had added to the animal grease recycled oils
whose origins cannot be safely established. It is thus extremely
probable that chemical substances have at one time or another
contaminated batches of recycled oils.
Belgian authorities were originally informed on March 19 that
there was a problem, but did not reveal the scale of the hazard
until the end of May. This initial lack of a response contrasts
with the haste which characterised the management of the crisis
since May 28, the EU preliminary report contends.
Verkest, based in Flanders, enjoys a virtual monopoly in the
Belgian trade in fats and greases intended for animal feeds. It
exports to several bordering countries including France, Luxembourg
and Holland. The inspectors' preliminary report accuses Verkest
of fraud regarding the content of its products: the composition
of greases for the animal feeds ... included up to a third of
recycled oils. The inspectors also point the finger at the
transport company employed by Verkest, whose tankers were
never cleaned between each loading.
The suspect oils used by Verkest mainly came from another company
now under suspicion, Fogra, based in the south of Belgium. Fogra
is accused of disregarding EU legislation concerning the processing
of animal waste products.
The regional authorities in Wallonia have the company listed
as waste reprocessors, whereas it actually reprocesses
animal waste from slaughterhouses and abattoirs, as well as cooking
oil used in fast-food outlets, and from other agricultural and
food industry sources in Belgium, France and Luxembourg. The wrong
classification means that the company does not have to adhere
to the much stricter regulation governing the processing of substances
used in the food chain. This affects such essential standards
as the provision of distinct clean and soiled
sectors, and the necessity to regularly clean and disinfect plants
and equipment, as well as the vehicles used to transport the products.
The inspectors report that the liquefaction process Fogra used
to collect the greases inevitably generates contamination
by undesirable chemical substances.
The Belgian government has been given 10 days to respond to
the preliminary findings. The European Union Commission meets
on June 23, when it will decide the scope of the legal case it
will mount against Belgium.
The scandal continues to impact on the Belgian agriculture
and food sectors. Le Soir wrote on Thursday, The
Belgian dairy sector is on the edge of asphyxiation. Despite
some companies being given a clean bill of health, the economic
situation of Belgian producers of milk and milk products has become
less and less bearable. Renaat Debergh, the secretary-general
of the Belgian Confederation of the Milk Industy, said: The
survival of the whole of the Belgian milk industry is threatened
today. Because of the persistent indecision of the European authorities,
a whole sector is at the edge of bankruptcy. He said that
three firms have already shut down and some 600 staff laid off.
The jobs of up to 6,000 who are employed in this industry could
be affected.
Belgian Coca-Cola products withdrawn
Earlier this week, more than 100 Belgian children were hit
by sudden illness after drinking Coca-Cola products. The symptoms
produced by the suspect drinks include nausea and headaches. A
number of those affected have been hospitalised. Belgian Health
Minister Luc Van den Bossche said the ban on the sales of Coca-Cola
beverages announced on Thursday would continue, as the source
of the contamination was still unknown.
The authorities were quick to order the withdrawal of a range
of suspect soft drinks produced by the company in Belgium. A similar
ban was also made in France and Holland where exports from the
Belgian plants are widely sold.
On its web site, Coca-Cola reports that after thorough
investigation, no health or safety issues were found. It
attributes the problems to the use of a defective
supply of the carbon dioxide gas used at its Antwerp plant. It
also claims that a wood treatment agent used on transportation
pallets had caused an offensive odour on the outside bottom
of the can.
The manufacturers of the gas, Swede Aga Gas, denied Coca-Cola's
claims that bad CO2 was to blame. The company said
the gas was perfectly normal and they had samples of the batch
that was delivered to Belgium to prove it. This caused Coca-Cola
to change tack. According to a report in Friday's Le Soir,
Coca-Cola's report transmitted to the Ministry of Health
reckoned that chlorine products used to clean automatic
drink dispensers' could be the cause of the illnesses.
Coca-Cola makes over 75 percent of its profits from overseas
sales of its productssome 20 percent in Europe alone. The
Asian and Russian crises of the last year hit Coca-Cola sales
hard, which were down 10 percent at the end of 1998 and in early
1999. Although the Belgian market represents just 1 percent of
Coca-Cola's sales, the company is desperate to ensure its multibillion-dollar
European market is not hit by a scandal involving the safety of
its products.
See Also:
Dioxin contamination scandal hits Belgium
Effects spread through European Union and beyond
[8 June 1999]
BSE/CJD
& Food Safety Issues
[WSWS Full Coverage]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |