There
is a new and growing danger with the food we eat. Criminal gangs are selling
billions of dollars of fake food to supermarkets around the world. The food
could be very dangerous. In the past few years, there have been some
high-profile scandals. In Britain, tons of horse meat ended up in products that
were labeled as beef. British police recently found a product that used cheaper
peanut powder instead of almond flour. This could seriously harm or kill people
with peanut allergies. In 2008, six babies died in China after gangs made and
sold fake milk powder. Gangs can make a lot of money from fake food. It is also
safer than selling drugs for the gangs because the penalties are lower.
The
assistant director of Interpol, Michael Ellis, told the BBC that food crime is
very similar to the drugs trade. He said: "In my experience, the patterns
used by criminals involved in counterfeiting are very similar to those used in
the dealing of drugs." He said police in 33 countries showed that food crime
is a serious international problem. The police found children's candies that
were dyed with a poisonous chemical, 430,000 litres of fake drinks and 22 tons
of long-grain rice that was labeled as high-quality basmati rice. The British
government said it was a difficult problem to tackle. It said that using
technology might be the only way to beat the criminal gangs. (Breaking News English)
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