A Fifth of Tested British Meat Contains DNA From Other Animals, Study Reveals

John Smithies
By John Smithies
September 5, 2018World News
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LONDON—Over a fifth of meat sold in the UK contains DNA from animals not listed on the packaging, new data suggests.

Some contain DNA from up to four different animals, while others may not even be the meat on the product’s label at all.

Test results were collected by the Food Standards Agency (FSA) in 2017 in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland and were suggestive of “deliberate inclusion,” they said.

Of 665 results, 145 partly or wholly consisted of meat other than the one specified.

The data was obtained by the BBC who made a Freedom of Information request to the FSA.

The samples were obtained from businesses suspected by the FSA as having “compliance issues.” These included 73 retailers, 50 restaurants, and 22 food processing or manufacturing plants.

‘Deliberate Inclusion’

The product most affected was mincemeat, with cow DNA the most commonly-found meat type present that wasn’t labeled, followed by pig, chicken, sheep, and turkey. Ready meals such as curries and pizzas were also found to be affected.

The FSA said it mainly looked for samples of cow, sheep, pig, horse, chicken, turkey, and goat and that DNA from other animals could have been present but not identified.

The agency said it considered DNA at a proportion of 1 percent or greater evidence of “deliberate inclusion.”

Cheap sausages purchased from an Asda
Cheap sausages purchased from an Asda supermarket are shown in this file photo. (Cate Gillon/Getty Images)

An FSA spokesman told the BBC that the test results were “not representative of the wider food industry” and that local authorities around the UK would need to take responsibility for investigating the findings.

Tests were conducted by less than half of the local authorities in the UK before they sent their findings to the FSA, meaning it is difficult to assess the full situation in the country.

Five years ago a scandal erupted in the UK when horse DNA was found in frozen beefburgers sold by some British supermarkets. Following analysis, pig DNA was also found in many beefburgers, controversial because pork is a taboo food in the Muslim and Jewish communities (pdf).

The scandal highlighted a lack of traceability in the food industry, with many European countries conducting their own subsequent investigations into the issue.

Mislabeled processed meat was found in France, Norway, Switzerland, Sweden, and Germany, among others.

In mid-2017 two men were jailed in the UK for attempting to pass off 30 tons of horsemeat as beef.

A laboratory technician extracts a sample
A laboratory technician extracts a sample from a package of ready-made lasagne to check the contents for possible horsemeat in Krefeld, Germany on Feb. 14, 2013. (Juergen Schwarz/Getty Images)

Horsemeat was shipped by Danish firm FlexiFoods to a London-based company where it was mixed with beef, repackaged, and relabeled as pure beef.

On the men’s sentencing, the judge said, “It’s difficult to recall now the conditions that made this horsemeat scandal headline news every day five years ago but it made an impact on the public in general.

“They were suspicious of the food that they had—it extended far beyond meat.

“It was not an activity that was brought to an end by anything other than the arrest of the perpetrators.

“The victims in question, properly so-called, of conspiracy to defraud were customers, either wholesalers or the customers of the markets and supermarkets who bought an item that was not what it said it was.”

From The Epoch Times

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