China Halts Exports of Maling Canned Meat

Popular canned meat allegedly contaminated with the antibiotic nitrofurans, which is thought to cause cancer.

SHANGHAI, China — Exports from one of China's best-known food makers were stopped Friday after Hong Kong authorities said they found unsafe chemicals in canned luncheon meat.

Shanghai-based Maling Food Co. issued a statement Friday saying it had sent top executives to Hong Kong to assist with an investigation into allegations that a shipment of its meat, about as famous in China as Spam is in the U.S., was contaminated with the antibiotic nitrofurans, which is thought to cause cancer.

"We take this issue very seriously and immediately took relevant measures, asking the Hong Kong authorities to recall the affected products," Maling said in a statement on its Web site.

Phone calls to the company's offices rang unanswered Friday morning.

The investigation comes amid a slew of findings of potentially unsafe foods and other products. Chinese officials have vowed to tighten controls on food processors, slaughterhouses and other suppliers to help improve safety.

Read the full Associated Press story here.

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