Horsemeat scandal gallops on to Switzerland

Coop, Switzerland’s second-largest supermarket chain, has confirmed that traces of horse were found in its own-brand beef lasagne, produced by the French company Comigel implicated in the “horsegate” scandal that is making headlines across Europe.

Coop, Switzerland’s second-largest supermarket chain, has confirmed that traces of horse were found in its own-brand beef lasagne, produced by the French company Comigel implicated in the “horsegate” scandal that is making headlines across Europe.

As a precaution Coop had pulled all the “Lasagne verdi alla bolognese” frozen meals carrying its own brand at stores in Switzerland on Monday.
 
Customers who bought the affected products can receive a full refund, Coop said on its website on Wednesday.
 
The own-brand lasagne came from French supplier Comigel based in Metz, which also produced contaminated Findus UK beef lasagnes.
 
The British unit of frozen foods group Findus began recalling its beef lasagne last week on advice from Comigel, after tests showed up to 100 per cent of the meat in them was horse.
 
Swiss consumers eat horsemeat, more commonly in the French-speaking region, but they are extremely sensitive about the origin of their meat products with strict labelling requirements in force.
 
French and British governments have since vowed to punish those found responsible. The scandal has caused particular anguish in Britain, where eating horse flesh is virtually taboo.

Food chain

The issue came to light on January 15, when during routine tests the Food Safety Authority in Ireland discovered horsemeat in frozen beef burgers produced by firms in Ireland and Britain and sold in supermarket chains including Tesco, Britain’s biggest retailer.
 
The “horsegate” affair has since implicated operators and middlemen in a host of EU countries, from abattoirs in Romania and factories in Luxembourg to traders in Cyprus and food companies in France.
 
Swiss food group Nestle, which sold the rights to the Findus brand in most of Europe in 2000 but retained them in Switzerland, launched a campaign this week to reassure consumers that Swiss Findus products were only made from Swiss beef.

„Not affected“

Coop’s main supermarket rival Migros, which stocks the Swiss Findus products, said it did not sell meat from Comigel and its products were not affected by the European scandal.
 
“For M-Budget lasagne the meat is imported from Germany from a supplier with whom we have a long business relation. The meat arrives cut in quarters allowing us to examine it. We then produce our own lasagne ourselves which allow us to control the price and quality,” Migros spokeswoman Monika Weibel told 24Heures newspaper.
 
Bern, Vaud and Aargau cantonal laboratories are reportedly continuing testing different samples of prepared lasagne from all major retailers in the country with results expected on Thursday.
 
Bernard Klein, a Vaud cantonal chemist, told Swiss television the discovery of horse instead of beef in Switzerland „was a surprise for everyone“.
 
The Consumer Protection Federation for French-speaking Switzerland said it was sceptical about retailers’ ability to trace the ingredients used in frozen meals.
 
Aline Clerc told 24Heures: “Unfortunately Switzerland is not a protected island in the middle of Europe. The number of people who intervene in the production of frozen meals dilutes the responsibility of each one. In Bern there are pressures from certain people to reduce the labelling about where ingredients come from while in fact we should be doing the opposite to add more.”

European measures

The European horsemeat scandal is quickly spreading to other countries.
 
After Britain and Ireland French retailers‘ federation FCD said Febuary 10 that French supermarkets were also pulling several products supplied by Findus and Comigel on concerns that they were mis-labelled. The supermarkets are Auchan, Casino, Carrefour, Cora, Monoprix and Picard.
  
On Wednesday Germany said it was investigating a consignment of beef lasagne sent from Luxembourg to an unnamed retailer in North Rhine-Westphalia on suspicion it might contain horsemeat.
 
The first evidence that the labelling scandal could go beyond horsemeat also emerged, as upmarket British grocer Waitrose said its testing found that some of its frozen British beef meatballs might contain pork. The firm, part of the John Lewis Partnership, has withdrawn the product from sale.
 
Authorities have said there is no risk to public health from the tainted foods. But growing revelations about the use of horsemeat in products labelled beef have raised questions about the safety of the European food supply chain and prompted governments to send out a European Union-wide alert.
 
Ministers from the worst-affected nations will meet in Brussels later on Wednesday to discuss their response to the scandal. Wednesday’s meeting would focus on strengthening existing EU rules, particularly on product testing and enforcement by national authorities.
 
The European Commission said it was also studying the option of introducing country-of-origin labels on processed meat products, although officials have said privately that the complexity of supply chains would make this next to impossible to implement.

Nächster Artikel