Chinese supermarkets pull Brazil meat from shelves as food safety fears grow
Some of China's largest food suppliers have pulled
Brazilian beef and poultry from their shelves in the first concrete sign that a
deepening scandal over Brazil's meat processing industry is hitting business in
its top export market. Graphic: tmsnrt/2o3yvWW
The moves by Sun Art Retail Group (6808.HK), China's
biggest hypermarket chain, and the Chinese arms of global retail giants
Wal-Mart Stores Inc (WMT.N) and Metro AG (MEOG.DE) come days after China
temporarily suspended Brazilian meat imports.
Safety fears over Brazilian meat have grown since
police accused inspectors in the world's biggest exporter of beef and poultry
of taking bribes to allow sales of rotten and salmonella-tainted meats.
A spokeswoman for Sun Art Retail, which operates 400
Chinese hypermarkets, said on Wednesday the chain had removed beef supplied by
top Brazilian exporters BRF SA (BRFS3.SA) and JBS SA (JBSS3.SA) from its
shelves from Monday. Brazilian beef accounts for less than 10 percent of Sun
Art's beef supply, she said.
Wal-Mart has also removed Brazilian meat products
from its stores, said a person familiar with the matter. He declined to be
quoted because of the sensitivity of the matter.
Germany's Metro has withdrawn Brazilian chicken legs
and wings from its Chinese stores, said a manager, who declined to be named as
he was not allowed to speak to media. The retailer, with 84 stores in China,
does not sell Brazilian beef.
While Brazilian officials sought late on Tuesday to
reassure consumers that the investigation had revealed only isolated incidents
of sanitary problems, the reaction by Chinese retailers suggests that the probe
could have far-reaching repercussions for the world's top meat exporter.
Hong Kong, the second-biggest buyer of Brazilian
meat last year, has also issued a ban on imports, following similar steps by
Japan, Canada, Mexico and Switzerland.
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