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China Cracks Down on Toy Factories

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[November 01, 2007]  BEIJING (AP) -- More than 700 toy factories in booming southern China have been banned from exporting what they produce as part of a crackdown on shoddy products, the government said Thursday.

The four-month-long crackdown was triggered by widespread reports of dangerous or faulty Chinese exports, including toys tainted with lead, toothpaste laden with an antifreeze ingredient, and pet food fortified with an industrial chemical.

[Caption: A staff member from the Malaysian Association of Standards examines toys make in China during a press conference in Kuala Lumpur on Wednesday. Chinese-made children's toys sold in Malaysia were found to have a high level of lead, a consumer group said Wednesday, and urged the government to regulate their safety standards.  (AP Photo)]

The Guangdong provincial government said the export bans followed inspections of 1,726 toy factories, almost 85 percent of the province's total.

Of those, 764 had their export licenses revoked or suspended "because of various quality problems," it said in a statement posted Thursday on its official Web site. Another 690 were ordered to renovate their plants and improve product quality, it said.

Problems in China's toy industry came into focus earlier this year when America's Mattel Inc. recalled more than 21 million Chinese-made toys worldwide. Products including Barbie doll accessories and toy cars were pulled off shelves because of concerns about lead paint or tiny detachable magnets that could be swallowed.

Design flaws caused the vast majority of the recalls, but the problem has rebounded on producers in Guangdong, where 5,000 toy-making enterprises accounted for about 80 percent of China's toy exports last year.

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About 1.5 million people are employed by the factories, which produced $16.1 billion worth of toys last year.

The government says it also has sponsored quality control training for more than 1,000 people in the country's toy industry in an effort to ensure export safety.

[Associated Press; By LAUREN TARA LaCAPRA]

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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