Contaminated
eggs found in 40 countries as EU ministers meet: DPA
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[September 05, 2017] FRANKFURT
(Reuters) - Eggs contaminated with the insecticide fipronil have been
discovered in 40 countries, including 24 of the European Union's 28
member states, German news agency DPA reported on Tuesday, without
citing its sources.
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Millions of eggs have been pulled from European supermarket shelves,
though some national regulators have voiced concern that many
contaminated eggs have already entered the food chain, mainly
through processed products such as biscuits, cakes and salads.
EU agriculture ministers meeting in Tallinn, Estonia, are due to
discuss the egg scandal on Tuesday, DPA said.
DPA said a spokeswoman for the European Commission confirmed that
the only EU member states so far unaffected are Lithuania, Portugal,
Cyprus and Croatia.
The non-EU states in which contaminated eggs have been discovered
include the United States, Russia, South Africa and Turkey, DPA
reported.
Dutch and Belgian authorities traced the source of the insecticide
to a supplier of cleaning products in the Netherlands. Two Dutch men
who ran the cleaning company Chickfriend were arrested last month.
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While a large number of contaminated eggs would need to be eaten to
affect health, fipronil is considered moderately toxic and can cause
organ damage in humans.
It is widely used to treat pets for ticks and fleas but its use in
the food chain - for example, to clean out barns - is forbidden.
(Reporting by Maria Sheahan; editing by Jason Neely)
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