The declaration, seen by Reuters, may be an effort by China to
reduce the additional testing it has carried out on imported foods
over the last week and make exporters responsible for guaranteeing
their products' safety, one meat importer who had signed it said.
He declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of the
issue.
The French pork industry association Inaporc also received the
notice, an official said.
China's General Administration of Customs did not immediately
respond to a fax seeking comment.
The declaration says the exporter is willing to comply with Chinese
laws and guidance from the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization
and the World Health Organization to ensure food imported into China
is not contaminated with the virus that causes COVID-19.
"In the event that a new case/suspected case of COVID-19 is detected
in a food enterprise, or if there is a risk of contamination of food
products exported to China, we are willing to take all necessary
measures to eliminate food safety risks and protect consumer
health," it adds.
Beijing began testing imported food for the coronavirus after an
outbreak in a wholesale food market last week.
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In Tianjin, the primary port for Beijing, authorities are testing
all containers of meat, importers said.
More than 30,000 samples of meat, seafood, vegetables and fruit were
tested between June 11-17. All tested negative for the coronavirus,
customs said on Thursday.
"It's very costly and time-consuming to test all products. They're
asking suppliers to sign this letter so they can go back to normal,"
said the meat exporter.
How much weight the declaration will carry, however, is unclear.
"If any shipments are found to have COVID-19, they will be destroyed
anyway, with or without the letter," said another meat supplier who
had not signed it.
(Reporting by Dominique Patton; additional reporting by Emily Chow
in Shanghai and Gus Trompiz in Paris; editing by Barbara Lewis)
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