by winston » Fri Dec 14, 2012 6:12 am
Food officials probe plant over gutter oil racket by Candy Chan
A Kwai Chung oil manufacturer is being investigated for allegedly mixing cooking oil with gutter oil and selling the product to local restaurants.
Food inspectors entered the Wing Hing oil plant in Wing Kin Industrial Building yesterday afternoon and collected three samples for testing.
They visited 13 restaurants that reportedly get their cooking oil from Wing Hing, and also Beidahuang Rice Industry group in Tuen Mun, which supplies the alleged rogue manufacturer.
The inspection was prompted by a newspaper report that the plant was selling swill-cooked dirty oil which contains benzo(a)pyrene - an agent that has been linked with cancer.
The report said Wing Hing bought oil from Beidahuang at a wholesale price of HK$16.25 per catty and resold it to restaurants at HK$7.50 to HK$8 per catty.
The newspaper alleged the price was low because the oil is mixed with gutter oil.
Ko Wing-man, secretary for food and health, said the government will not tolerate any food that contains harmful substances.
Chan King-ming, associate professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong department of biochemistry and environmental science, assisted in testing the oil and confirmed it contained three times the amount of benzo(a)pyrene suggested by the European Union.
"The harmful substances can cause stomach cancer and affect the liver," Chan said.
A Beidahuang official, who did not give his name, said "businessman should have a good heart and should not harm people."
He added: "I will definitely not sell our product anymore."
Ng Wai-kuen, the owner of Kuen Fat Restaurant, said he will stop using the oil.
"We are old customers. We bought oil from [Wing Hing] not because of the [low] price," Ng said.
The owner of Wing Hing could not be reached for comment last night.
The Food and Environmental Hygiene Department confirmed that 12 restaurants, including Kuen Fat, have stopped using the oil bought from Wing Hing. Another restaurant was closed for renovation.
Source: The Standard HK
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