China
vaccine maker hit by police, graft probes as scandal
widens
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[July 24, 2018]
By Adam Jourdan
SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Changsheng
Biotechnology, the Chinese vaccine maker accused of falsifying data,
plunged deeper into crisis on Tuesday as both police and the country's
top graft watchdog launched investigations into the firm.
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As public outrage over the scandal snowballed this week, political
leadership in Beijing, eager to maintain confidence in China's
vaccine industry, has responded with sharp condemnation of the firm
and calls for swift punishment.
"Anything that touches on drug or food safety also involving
children is just a huge hot button in China," said Kent Kedl,
Shanghai-based senior partner at consultancy Control Risks.
People were now openly asking why authorities hadn't done more to
prevent the issue, he said, adding that the government needed to
show a tough stance to ensure this did not become an issue that
threatened social stability.
"This is probably the highest-level of code red that the government
faces."
China's drug regulator has accused Changsheng of fabricating
production and inspection records related to a rabies vaccine
regularly given to infants. The firm was also found to have sold
252,600 substandard DPT vaccines, a mandatory vaccine in China to
inoculate children against diphtheria, whooping cough and tetanus.
While there have been no known reports of people being harmed by the
vaccine, Chinese regulators ordered Changsheng to halt production
and recall the product. Changsheng apologized publicly in a
regulatory filing on Monday.
Changsheng's Shenzhen-listed shares plunged by their daily limit of
10 percent on Tuesday, extending falls that have seen it lose $1.8
billion or more than half their value since mid-July.
Changsheng's chairwoman, three senior executives and two mid-level
employees have been taken in for questioning by local police, the
company said on Tuesday. The country's top graft watchdog, the
Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI), also said it
had begun an investigation into the firm.
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Those probes are in addition to an investigation by the securities
regulator, which is looking at whether Changsheng violated
information disclosure rules.
Chinese citizens have been quick to express their fury online with
one discussion hashtag on the Sina Weibo microblog gathering over
600 million views. Censors initially appeared to block some posts
about the case.
"The Changsheng vaccine case has created a tsunami on the internet,"
the state-run Global Times newspaper said in an editorial late on
Monday, adding it was unrealistic to try and completely control it,
though it could not be left unchecked.
"If nothing is done to manage online public discourse, it could
become a festering gateway leading the country towards chaos and
creating serious unpredictability."
The scandal has prompted speculation that mainland Chinese would
take their children outside mainland China for vaccines as has
happened with previous scandals, which could lead to a shortage in
Chinese-controlled regions like Hong Kong or Macau.
The Hong Kong Department of Health told Reuters local supply of the
vaccines remained stable and it would closely monitor the situation.
Macau's health bureau said current supply was sufficient for
residents and there was no need for concern.
($1 = 6.8204 Chinese yuan)
(Reporting by Adam Jourdan; Additional reporting by Farah Master and
Anne Marie Roantree in Hong Kong and Ben Blanchard in Beijing;
Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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