The News
Wednesday 24 of April 2024

Brazil Strives to Quell Meat Scandal as Hong Kong Bans Imports


Employees are seen during a technical visit of Brazil's Agriculture Minister Blairo Maggi at the Brazilian meatpacker JBS SA in Lapa,photo: Reuters/Ueslei Macerlino
Employees are seen during a technical visit of Brazil's Agriculture Minister Blairo Maggi at the Brazilian meatpacker JBS SA in Lapa,photo: Reuters/Ueslei Macerlino
Brazil's meat investigation is the latest involving federal police and prosecutors and comes on the heels of a massive corruption scandal involving construction giants

LAPA, Brazil – Brazilian authorities on Tuesday began scouring meat plants closed after a probe into corruption by health inspectors and the alleged sale of rotten products, as Hong Kong dealt a blow to the world’s top beef and poultry exporter with an import ban.

Brazilian President Michel Temer’s government has moved quickly since Friday to both address and downplay the scandal in the meatpacking industry, one of the bright spots of an economy struggling with its worst recession on record.

Brazil’s Agriculture Minister Blairo Maggi reacts during a technical visit at the Brazilian meatpacker JBS SA in the city of Lapa, Parana state, Brazil, March 21, 2017. Photo: Reuters/Ueslei Marcelino

It won a victory earlier on Tuesday when South Korea lifted a ban imposed a day earlier on all poultry imports from BRF SA , the world’s largest exporter of that meat.

But Hong Kong’s ban, which followed China’s decision to block imports of meat from the South American nation, showed the crisis was still not contained. China is the largest consumer of Brazilian meat, followed by Hong Kong.

The European Union also kept its ban on meat coming from four specific plants, while Chile maintained its total import ban. The U.S. Department of Agriculture started testing all shipments of raw beef and ready-to-eat products from Brazil for pathogens.

Brazil’s meat investigation is the latest involving federal police and prosecutors and comes on the heels of a massive corruption scandal involving billions of dollars in political kickbacks made by construction giants to win contracts with state-controlled firms, especially the oil company Petrobras.

That probe has ensnared scores of top politicians, including several ministers in Temer’s center-right government.

The operation targeting meatpackers resulted from a two-year investigation that culminated in raids on processing plants and company offices in seven states late last week.

Police have accused more than 100 people, mostly health inspectors, of taking bribes for allowing the sale of rancid products, falsifying export documents or failing to inspect meatpacking plants at all.

Among the companies targeted were the world’s largest meat producer, JBS SA, and BRF.

Brazil’s Agriculture Minister Blairo Maggi reacts during a technical visit at the Brazilian meatpacker JBS SA in the city of Lapa, Parana state, Brazil, March 21, 2017. Photo: Reuters/Ueslei Marcelino

Both JBS and BRF strongly reject the accusations and have begun a publicity campaign in Brazil to safeguard their reputations and point out what they say are errors in information the police have disclosed.

Brazil’s government also has gone on the offensive against the police operation.

“We are confident there are no public health risks associated with Brazilian meat,” Luis Eduardo Rangel, secretary for standards at Brazil’s agriculture ministry, said before officials began audits of 21 meat plants named by police.

The inspections include a JBS unit that exports to China, the EU and other markets in the southern state of Parana, where the investigation was headquartered.

Luis Boudens, head of the national federation of federal police, defended the police investigation, saying that government and industry criticism was being made to protect an important sector of the economy and politicians.

“Federal agents have taken down a mafia of businessmen that bribed inspectors … and politicians to obtain certification to sell meat without any inspections,” he said in a statement on the federation’s website.

CHINA CONCERNED

The audit of the plants is expected to take three weeks, Rangel said. He added that Chinese officials had asked for assurances on Monday that the sanitary quality of Brazil’s meat products had not been compromised.

Employees are seen during a technical visit of Brazil’s Agriculture Minister Blairo Maggi at the Brazilian meatpacker JBS SA in the city of Lapa, Parana state, Brazil, March 21, 2017. Photo: Reuters/Ueslei Marcelino

“We will present this letter to them today with our assurances and, once we have, we expect that import restrictions will be lifted,” he said.

In Beijing, officials called on Brazil’s meatpacking industry to take stricter safety measures.

“China is concerned by the quality problems of some meat products in Brazil,” foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told reporters.

“We hope that the Brazilian side will conduct a thorough investigation of the case … and take more stringent measures to ensure safe and reliable food exports to China.”

She declined to comment on when the temporary ban on Brazilian meat imports might be lifted.

STEPHEN EINSEMANN