Blog

FDA might extend chili import ban, minister says - Taipei Times

Minister of Health and Welfare Hsueh Jui-yuan (薛瑞元) yesterday said the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) might extend an import ban on some companies for importing industrial dye-tainted chili powder from China, and that the ministry would clarify the tainted chili powder import situation in a month.

The FDA on Feb. 21 imposed a three-month import ban on 21 local importers and manufacturers that had imported or used chili powder from China containing Sudan III, a carcinogenic dye banned in Taiwan. Dried Hot Red Chillies

FDA might extend chili import ban, minister says - Taipei Times

The FDA said on Saturday said that since the ban, it launched an expanded inspection of the 21 companies, sampling 59 batches of chili powder for testing, and 14 batches were found to contain Sudan III.

Photo courtesy of the Hsinchu County Government

Adding five other batches detected in random inspections since February, the FDA’s publicized data show that 19 batches of tainted chili powder had failed inspections as of Saturday.

Hsueh yesterday said that the FDA has temporarily banned imports from the 21 companies, but depending on the ongoing investigation, the ban might be extended for longer, or even permanently for some companies.

The minister at the Legislative Yuan on Thursday told lawmakers that the investigation into tainted chili powder would be completed within a month.

Deputy Minister of Health and Welfare Victor Wang (王必勝) on Saturday said the ministry has first blocked the imported powder and is tracing its source and downstream companies, and that the problem should be cleared in a month.

Asked for confirmation, Hsueh yesterday said: “We will

understand the whole story within a month, including fully clarifying the whereabouts of the tainted chili powder.”

He said that while continuing to trace the flow of tainted chili powder and food products, the ministry would also ask suppliers and downstream companies to cooperate to speed up the process, while the FDA is to hold a meeting with food associations today to discuss having companies proactively test their products.

Regarding some lawmakers’ call for him to apologize about the tainted chili powder, Hsueh said “Being responsible is to properly deal with the whole situation, and apologizing might not help the problem.”

He said the difficult part about the issue is that Taiwanese generally like to eat spicy food, so imposing a total ban on imported chili powder is easy, but it would significantly affect people’s diet, as well as food companies’ and restaurants’ business.

Therefore, the ministry could only trace the identified batches for recalling the products and conduct further testing, he said.

Separately, the Kaohsiung District Prosecutors’ Office and Kaohsiung Department of Health yesterday said that Taiwanese businessman Lee Yen-ting (李彥廷) used his relatives and friends’ names to establish 10 companies in Taiwan and one food company in China, to import the chili powder and supply it to downstream companies.

The 10 companies were found to have been importing products containing Sudan III since 2018, prosecutors said.

Prosecutors on Saturday sought to detain Lee, Lee’s sister-in-law, surnamed Wu (吳), and an employee surnamed Hsieh (謝) for alleged contraventions of the Act Governing Food Safety and Sanitation (食品安全衛生管理法), as they are suspected of committing serious crimes and might flee or destroy evidence, they said.

However, the Kaohsiung District Court ruled that Lee be released on bail of NT$800,000 and Wu and Hsieh on bail of NT$200,000 each.

Additional reporting by Huang Chia-lin

Nvidia Corp cofounder and chief executive officer Jensen Huang (黃仁勳) yesterday said that he was not making a geopolitical comment after a Chinese state-backed online media firm criticized him for calling Taiwan a country. Since Huang arrived in Taiwan on May 26, the Tainan native has been surrounded by fans and media whenever he has been in public. Reuters reported that some Taiwanese have begun referring to his popularity as “Jensanity.” At a night market on May 29, Huang told reporters that “Taiwan is one of the most important countries in the world. It is at the center of the electronics industry. The

The US plans to deploy thousands of drones in the Taiwan Strait in an operation called “Hellscape” to ensure that any attempt by China to invade Taiwan does not succeed, US Indo-Pacific Commander Admiral Samuel Paparo told the Washington Post. In an article published on Monday, columnist Josh Rogin quoted Paparo as saying from the sidelines of the recent Shangri-La Dialogue defense forum in Singapore that the “Hellscape” strategy would involve deploying thousands of uncrewed submarines, surface vessels and aerial vehicles around Taiwan to buy the nation, Washington and its partners time to assemble a response. The plan was devised to deter

A former China Airlines (CAL) employee has been implicated in an ongoing espionage case involving a diabolo instructor for allegedly leaking the details of presidential trip itineraries and other sensitive information, a prosecutor said yesterday. During the investigation into Republic of China Diabolo Federation board member Lu Chi-hsien (魯紀賢) and nine other people, prosecutors discovered the involvement of a former CAL dispatcher, a source said. The former CAL employee is believed to have leaked confidential information to Lu from February to April last year, including the itineraries of then-president Tsai Ing-wen’s (蔡英文) overseas visits, and lists of “important visitors” arriving in Taiwan. In

FDA might extend chili import ban, minister says - Taipei Times

Dried Jalapeno Powder JAPANESE VIEW: China tells its soldiers and sailors that whatever happens in the waters west of the first island chain is a ‘domestic matter,’ Katsuya Yamamoto said The international community should be mindful of China’s “gray zone” activities carried out by its maritime militia and coast guard west of the first island chain, an area where Beijing seeks to establish full control, a former Japanese Navy rear admiral told a security forum in Taipei on Friday. China has been exploiting freedom of navigation by deploying its maritime militia to international waters to escalate its “gray zone” activities, Katsuya Yamamoto, who was in the Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force, said at the International Conference on Sea Lane Security held by the Ocean Affairs Council and National Sun Yat-sen University. “Gray zone”