A Chinese mom shops for milk formula while carrying her baby in a supermarket in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, Jan 23.[Photo/IC] |
The food safety authorities and other government agencies are still searching for the whereabouts of 3,300 cans of knockoff infant formula sold in four Chinese provinces, said senior officials at a press conference held by the State Council’s food safety office Saturday.
The latest scandal involved roughly 17,000 cans of such counterfeit baby powder and the suspects made nearly 2.0 million yuan ($310,000).
"It's a criminal case where cheap baby formulas were illegally repackaged and sold as high priced brand-name products for profit margins. It also violates intellectual property rights," said Teng Jiacai, deputy director of the office and vice-minister of China Food and Drug Administration.
Currently, six suspects are being questioned and have been referred for prosecution and another one surnamed Yang is still at large, he said.
Investigators found the counterfeit infant formulas, which previous examinations found posed no safety risk for consumers, concerns two brand names, BeingMate and Abbott and have been sold in four provinces of Henan, Hubei, Anhui, and Jiangsu.
Previous reports said they'd been circulating at seven provinces.
The Supreme People's Procuratorate first publicized the case on its website in late March. But in September 2015, the Shanghai public security bureau was informed that fake Abbott brand milk powder was on sale.
The investigations took long as "the case is very complicated and run by a gang of 'professionals,' who knew both the industry and related laws and regulations concerning baby formulas quite well," he explained.
The counterfeiting of the brand-name products involved eight provinces including repackaging, label printing, and marketing, said Ma Chunliang, a division chief of the administration.
"It's an emerging situation in food safety cases and stakeholders need to figure out new ways to handle such cases involving violations to violates intellectual property rights," he said.
The State Council food safety office has ordered overhaul of the marketing network of baby formulas to avert such a problem in the future, Teng Jiacai added.
He alerted consumers the risks of counterfeits particularly online.