Lactalis
says baby milk could have been contaminated for years
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[February 01, 2018]
By Sybille de La Hamaide and Gus Trompiz
PARIS (Reuters) - French dairy group
Lactalis could have been producing salmonella-tainted baby milk since
2005, its chief executive was quoted as saying on Thursday, adding the
growing crisis was likely to cost the company hundreds of millions of
euros.
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Lactalis has recalled 12 million tins in France and around the world
after several babies were taken ill last year after drinking
salmonella-contaminated milk produced at a factory in western
France.
French authorities have said there were 38 "Salmonella Agona"
infections reported between mid-August and December last year, 36 of
them clearly linked to Lactalis milk. A group representing victims'
families say at least 10 more cases are unaccounted for.
The same strain of salmonella was also responsible for some
infections in 2005, Lactalis Chief Executive Emmanuel Besnier told
French business paper Les Echos, adding it was possible other
infections had occurred since then.
"It can not be excluded that babies have consumed contaminated milk
over this period," Besnier said, questioning the effectiveness of
16,000 tests performed by an unidentified private laboratory that
had revealed nothing.
Besnier said Lactalis was stopping production at one of its
facilities at the factory in Craon due to the outbreak. In 2005, the
plant was owned by Celia, a company taken over by Lactalis in 2006.
"If the analysis of end-products had revealed the presence of
Salmonella Agona, we would of course not have marketed the products
and we would have avoided the crisis," Lactalis said in a statement.
The victims' association said it had read Besnier's comments with
"dismay".
"These are several hundred million boxes concerned and several
hundred thousand tonnes of products sent to more than 80 countries.
This is a health scandal of unprecedented scale," it said in a
statement.
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"This implies that the victims could have been much more numerous."
Besnier said the scandal was "the biggest crisis I've ever had to
face as a boss."
"We can't say definitively but (the cost) will be very high, several
hundred million euros," he told Les Echos.
"This case could cost us our export license for a still undetermined
period," he added.
Besnier did not give details of what the costs would be.
He said a lot of the milk recalled since early December had been
consumed and that returns were likely to amount to less than half of
total volumes.
French supermarket chains Leclerc, Auchan, Carrefour and Systeme U
have all acknowledged that some of the baby milk remained on their
shelves after the recall.
The victims' association's lawyer said families intended to file
lawsuits against Auchan and Leclerc. Besnier said Lactalis was the
target of multiple legal complaints.
(Additional reporting by Sudip Kar-Gupta and Leigh Thomas; Editing
by Vyas Mohan and Mark Potter)
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