China / Society

14 gangs busted for smuggling frozen meat

By HE NA (China Daily) Updated: 2015-06-24 06:51

14 gangs busted for smuggling frozen meat

A warehouse storing smuggled frozen meat has been seized in Shenzhou, South China's Guangdong province in this file photo. Photo taken on April 15, 2015. [Photo/IC]


Fourteen gangs involved in the smuggling of frozen meat products that pose huge health risks have been hunted down and the products seized in a recent crackdown, the General Administration of Customs said.

Customs officials sealed more than 100,000 metric tons of smuggled frozen meat worth up to 3 billion yuan ($483 million), including frozen chicken wings, beef and pork, the administration said.

The crackdown took place in June in 14 provinces and regions.

The Changsha Administration of Customs in Hunan province broke up two gangs with 20 members suspected of smuggling frozen meat products on June 1 and seized 800 tons of products worth more than 10 million yuan.

It is the largest case involving smuggled frozen meat products in the province's history.

"The products fully filled an entire compartment. It was smelly, and I nearly threw up when I opened the door," said Zhang Tao, an administration official.

According to Yang Bo, deputy director of the Anti-Smuggling Bureau of the Changsha Administration of Customs, smuggled meat products are not inspected, and this is unsafe because people may get life-threatening illnesses if they eat products that have bacteria and viruses such as bird flu or foot-and-mouth disease.

Yang said another problem with smuggled meat is that much of it has expired.

Officers from the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region's Administration of Customs found that some of the confiscated smuggled frozen meat is far older than the given expiration dates suggest, with some being more than 40 years old.

Experts say that as long as frozen meat shows no signs of thawing, customers can't tell fresh meat from bad meat that is decades old.

When smuggled meat is moved under poor conditions or repeatedly thawed-or even refrozen after the meat has already gone bad-the threat it poses will be especially serious.

Changsha customs said that high profits have already spurred the creation of an extensive supply chain.

Smugglers generally purchase meat for very low prices from foreign countries, and then have it delivered to Hong Kong in refrigerated containers.

The products will then be moved to the mainland via Vietnam, with smugglers hiring residents of border areas to move the products to Chinese border cities and then on to Changsha before the products are transported to sites around the country.

"To save costs, smugglers often hire ordinary vehicles instead of refrigerated ones. So the meat has often thawed out several times before reaching customers," said Yang, deputy director of the anti-smuggling bureau.

The boom in sales of agricultural products on Internet platforms also assists smugglers.

Experts called for the establishment of a nationwide supervision network and enhanced controls in border regions to prevent the products from entering China.

Xinhua contributed to this story.

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