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急求关于圣元事件的英文报道,或者面对中国乳业的诸多问题,我们国家应该怎么做(这个中英文都行)~~谢谢

来源:学生作业帮 编辑:搜搜做题作业网作业帮 分类:英语作业 时间:2024/06/17 02:32:40
急求关于圣元事件的英文报道,或者面对中国乳业的诸多问题,我们国家应该怎么做(这个中英文都行)~~谢谢
急求关于圣元事件的英文报道,或者面对中国乳业的诸多问题,我们国家应该怎么做(这个中英文都行)~~谢谢
http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/asiapcf/08/15/china.milk.investigation/index.html?eref=edition_business
China: Milk powder, infant breasts not linkedBy the CNN Wire Staff
August 16, 2010
(CNN) -- China's health ministry said a clinical investigation has found no evidence that milk powder made by a Chinese company caused three infant girls to grow breasts, according to the state-run Xinhua news agency.
The health ministry launched an investigation in Hubei province after claims that milk powder led to premature sexual development in infant girls.
Ministry spokesman Deng Haihua said Sunday the hormone content of the powder was within normal limits, Xinhua reported.
According to Xinhua, Deng said food safety experts tested the residue of milk powder consumed by the three infant girls, as well 42 samples of Synutra products on the market and 31 samples of dairy products from other producers.
The deputy head of Wuhan Children's Hospital's endocrine department said three of the four children treated for the condition had never consumed baby formula made by Synutra, Xinhua reported.
A fourth baby had used Synutra formula but then switched brands, Xinhua cited the hospital official as saying.
Last Monday, Synutra Chairman and CEO Liang Zhang in a statement called media reports "highly irresponsible and based on speculation instead of evidence."
He said that the company was working with state authorities, including the Dairy Association of China and the Office of Food Safety, to test product samples.
"We do not add hormones to our products, and we have invested heavily in research, quality control, formulations and ingredients," the statement on the company's web site said.
Liang added that the company was "in the process of taking legal action to protect our brand."
New Zealand-based Fonterra, which supplies milk powder to Synutra, said last week it remained "100 percent confident about the quality of its products."
Fonterra noted that Synutra also sourced milk locally and imported whey powder from Europe.
Estrogen hormones are banned in milk powder products, Deng said.
The case is the latest to hit China's dairy industry. In 2008, a tainted milk powder scandal involving melamine left six babies dead and sickened 290,000 in China's Hebei province.
The company at the center of it -- Sanlu Group -- filed for bankruptcy. Fonterra owned a 43 percent stake in it.
http://www.themoneytimes.com/featured/20100815/synutra%E2%80%99s-milk-powder-gets-clean-chit-after-probe-id-10124540.html
Synutra’s milk powder gets clean chit after probe
A clinical investigation of the hormone levels in the baby formula produced by Chinese company Synutra International found no evidence that the milk powder caused three infant girls to grow breasts.
The revelations of the tests thus give a clean chit to the NASDAQ-listed company named in the case.
Chinese authorities had widened the probe related to a hormone-tainted brand of infant formula causing an apparent growth in breasts in three baby girls, ranging in age from four months to 15 months.
The scandal
A wider range of dairy products, as also breast milk, had come under the scanner of the ministry of health.
"In order to guarantee that the milk powder tests are safe and reliable, this time the Ministry of Health has chosen Beijing and Shanghai to test the products," Liang Li, a medical expert who was also a member of the investigation panel said
This is not China’s first brush with food scandals.
In a food scare in 2008, more than 300,000 children were sickened after ingesting an infant formula tainted by the industrial chemical melamine.
Melamine, a noxious industrial compound, had been added by the manufacturers so that the formula passed the protein content test. The adulteration had claimed six lives.
Last month, 64 tonnes of milk powder and products laced, again, with melamine were seized in China.
The Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention decided to test the product of baby-formula maker Synutra (42 samples) as well as other brands (31 samples) to evaluate the level of estrogen in dairy products.
Breast milk tested to pinpoint source
Quality tests were conducted on dairy products in the major cities of Beijing and Shanghai.
"In order to guarantee that the milk powder tests are safe and reliable, this time the Ministry of Health has chosen Beijing and Shanghai to test the products," Liang Li, a medical expert who was also a member of the investigation panel said.
Peter Ben Embarek, a food safety expert for the World Health Organization, averred that testing samples of breast milk would help investigators pinpoint the source of the hormones.
"Hormone disruptors can come from the food, in the case of a baby that could be through infant formula, but it could come through the environment or other sources. I think they are trying to get a picture of what possibly could have caused this," said Embarek.
Meanwhile, in a statement issued to the public, Synutra had refuted the allegations that it adds hormones to its products as "false and highly irresponsible."
Synutra's shares plunged by nearly a third in New York over the course of last week when the news of the scandal broke out.
还有其它相关的报道,你在google里面输入powder milk Synutra 就可以自己找了.