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US FDA chief visits China to talk import safety
12 Oct 2007 15:49:08 GMT
Source: Reuters
WASHINGTON, Oct 12 (Reuters) - The head of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, in China meeting with safety officials, said on Friday talks are progressing toward an agreement to boost the safety of food and drug imports.

FDA Commissioner Andrew von Eschenbach in recent days held talks with Chinese Minister of Health Zhu Chen and other officials, after a year that included reports of tainted products imported from China into the United States, from pet food to toothpaste.

Von Eschenbach, speaking to reporters by telephone, praised China's commitment to improving the system of import inspection, and called talks "fruitful."

A U.S. congressional report issued earlier this month said poor food regulation in China may pose a grave threat to U.S. consumers and must be bolstered by stronger safeguards when importing into the United States.

The United States and China are working toward a memorandum of agreement that will lay out goals for improving the safety of imports.

A contingent of Chinese officials will travel to the United States later this month to meet with FDA staff to finalize the details of that deal, Von Eschenbach said.

The agreement is expected to be ready for signature in December when U.S. health secretary Mike Leavitt travels to Beijing.

The FDA shares oversight for import safety with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which is responsible for meat, poultry, and eggs. (Reporting by Kim Dixon, editing by Brian Moss)
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Two endangered Asiatic black, or moon bears play on a log in an enclosure at Animals Asia's rescue centre for ex-farm bears in Sichuan Province in this August 8, 2007 file photo. Smuggled overseas from China's far-flung bear farms, bear bile eye drops and remedies can be bought at traditional Chinese medicine shops the world over. The amber-brown elixir is difficult but not impossible to procure say TCM storekeepers in Singapore's downtown Chinatown, despite bear bile being banned outside China to protect the endangered Asiatic black bears whose gall bladders store it. To match CHINA-BEARS/ REUTERS/Gillian Murdoch/Files (CHINA)



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