Horsemeat probe 'will be relentless'

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 13 Februari 2013 | 15.36

13 February 2013 Last updated at 02:56 ET
Andrew Rhodes

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Andrew Rhodes, FSA: "We'll keep pursuing this until there is nothing left to find"

The probe into allegations of horsemeat mislabelling will be "relentless", the Food Standards Agency (FSA) has said.

It comes after a slaughterhouse in Todmorden, West Yorkshire and a meat firm near Aberystwyth were raided by FSA officials supported by police.

FSA director of operations Andrew Rhodes told the BBC that the agency's investigations would continue until "there was nothing left to find".

The FSA suspended operations at both raided premises and seized paperwork.

'Not complacent'

The horsemeat scandal began last month when Irish authorities discovered horsemeat in some burgers stocked by a number of UK supermarket chains.

Horsemeat has also been found in branded and supermarket-own ready meals, including lasagne and spaghetti bolognese.

The crisis has spread across Europe as details of the convoluted supply chain in the meat industry emerged.

The FSA in the UK has ordered food businesses to carry out tests on all processed beef products and the first results are expected on Friday.

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There is a completely legitimate trade in horsemeat, and nobody wants to frustrate that, but there isn't a legitimate trade in substituting one meat for another"

End Quote Andrew Rhodes Director of operations, Food Standards Agency

Mr Rhodes said: "We're progressing very well through our investigations but they're not complete yet. So I'm not going to speculate on what else we might find.

"But of course, we don't really expect to find anything because if people are behaving according to the law and doing what they should be doing then there should be nothing to find.

"But that doesn't mean that we are in any way complacent. We've been very relentless in this. We'll continue following it through until there is nothing left to find."

He added: "There is a completely legitimate trade in horsemeat, and nobody wants to frustrate that, but there isn't a legitimate trade in substituting one meat for another."

Mr Rhodes said consumers had every right to expect a product to be exactly what it said on the label, but no evidence of a food safety risk had been found so far.

The FSA ordered an audit of all horse-producing abattoirs in the UK after the horsemeat controversy emerged.

'Never knowingly'

The raided premises were Peter Boddy Licensed Slaughterhouse, in Todmorden, West Yorkshire, and Farmbox Meats Ltd, of Llandre near Aberystwyth.

The West Yorkshire plant was thought to have supplied horse carcasses to the Aberystwyth firm, which were then allegedly sold on as beef for kebabs and burgers.

Lab in Hamburg

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The BBC's Stephen Evans visited a lab in Hamburg which tests meat products

Mr Boddy said he was co-operating with the FSA and officials were "welcome to visit" his premises whenever they wanted.

Dafydd Raw Rees, of Farmbox Meats, said the firm was licensed to deal with horses and it had been cutting horsemeat, from the Irish Republic, for the last three weeks.

"As far as I am concerned I know nothing about the plant in West Yorkshire. I have never knowingly processed horsemeat until three weeks ago," he said.

"There is nothing we have done here which is not totally permissible."

Meanwhile, shadow environment secretary Mary Creagh has said she would not buy mince of any kind at the moment.

Asked if she had changed her eating habits, she told BBC 5 live: "Let's just say that I'm not very keen on mince at the moment, I think I know a bit too much now."

She said she would not buy mince in a ready meal or in a packet as a "precautionary principle".

Environment Secretary Owen Paterson will travel to Brussels on Wednesday for a meeting of European countries caught up in the horsemeat scandal.

Ministers from the Irish Republic, France, Romania, Luxembourg, Sweden and Poland will attend.

Mr Paterson has said it would be "totally unacceptable" if any UK business was "defrauding the public" by passing off horsemeat as beef.

The raids came as Mr Paterson met food retailers and suppliers to discuss plans for a new regime of quarterly testing of products.

In a separate development, Waitrose's Essential British Frozen Beef Meatballs has become the latest product to be withdrawn from UK supermarket shelves after pork was detected in two batches.


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