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Embalmed chickens a cancer risk
Veneranda
Langa, NewsDay
October 31, 2013
https://www.newsday.co.zw/2013/10/31/embalmed-chickens-cancer-risk/
Consuming chickens
that have been embalmed with chemicals as a preservation measure
can result in cancer, a medical expert warned yesterday.
Ruth Labode,
a medical expert and chairperson of the Parliamentary Portfolio
Committee on Health and Child Care said there was need to strengthen
quality control on imported foods to curb diseases that culminated
out of processed foods.
This follows
disclosures on Tuesday by the Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce
deputy president Davison Norupiri that a lot of chickens coming
into Zimbabwe from Brazilian markets were embalmed with chemicals
used to preserve dead bodies.
“Embalming
is a cheaper way of preserving meat products, but unfortunately
it is a chemical way and will obviously create reactions that can
cause illnesses on those people who consume the meat,” Labode
said.
“That
is why people wake up five years later to discover that they have
cancers, and it is not only imported products, but some local chickens
are also fed with fattening chemicals which can later affect people.”
Labode said
there was a quality control department in the Health ministry that
should conduct random checks on chicken products imported into the
country to ensure people were not endangered.
Standards Association
of Zimbabwe (SAZ) director-general Eve Gadzikwa said the organisation
was lobbying for a legal framework that would allow them to monitor
all types of products in order to curb the flooding of dangerous
counterfeit products.
“We have
been lobbying for a legal framework which will allow us to participate
in monitoring food products through delegated authority to enable
us to undertake checks on shipment of foods into our borders,”
Gadzikwa said.
“As far
as I know, this legal framework is now on the legislative agenda
and drafting stage and it will be part of the Bills that will be
brought before Parliament
during this session.”
She said SAZ
was aware of incidences of smuggled counterfeit products through
the country’s borders.
“What
we do not have is coordination with other departments because some
products are smuggled and it is difficult for us to have one legal
framework to deal with embalmed chickens and counterfeit drugs.
There is need for more policing at the country’s borders and
we will be working with ZIMRA to deal with those,” she said.
Agriculture,
Mechanisation and Irrigation Development minister Joseph Made told
delegates during the Alpha Media Holdings Conversations at Celebration
Centre yesterday that: “I do not want to comment on a great
story in one of the newspapers today (yesterday), but this is what
happens when we are not producing locally. I have always said we
should do away with genetically modified organisms (GMOs).”
In an interview
yesterday, Health and Child Care minister David Parirenyatwa expressed
ignorance on whether embalmed chickens were on sale in Zimbabwe.
“I do
not know about that. I will have to find out from my officers, but
at the moment I don’t know if anything of that sort is taking
place,” he said.
Several Zimbabweans
took to NewsDay social platforms calling for a ban on imports.
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