Poland finds equine DNA in beef during 3 warehouses



WARSAW |
Thu Feb 28, 2013 11:54am EST

WARSAW (Reuters) – Polish authorities found justification of equine DNA in beef stored during 3 storage comforts after several countries forked to Poland as one of a sources of sinister beef that has jarred a European food industry.

Poland’s General Veterinary Inspectorate pronounced in a matter late on Wednesday it found 3 sinister samples from 121 tested, with 80 some-more to be examined.

On Thursday, a mouthpiece for a Polish arm of seat hulk IKEA pronounced a association stopped shopping meatballs from a Polish retailer on concerns they could enclose horsemeat.

“Our Polish retailer sensitive us that there are some concerns,” pronounced Karolina Horoszczak, adding that a retailer had asked IKEA to stop regulating a products in a restaurants.

“These are preemptive actions and we are still watchful for exam results,” she added.

Officials in Ireland, Britain, Germany, Italy and a Czech Republic have reported that products such as burgers and lasagne containing horsemeat originated from comforts in Poland.

Polish officials had formerly pronounced they found no signs of equine beef during all abattoirs tested.

A European liaison erupted final month when tests in Ireland suggested some beef products contained equine meat, triggering recalls of processed dishes in several countries and deleterious certainty in Europe’s immeasurable and formidable food industry.

Poland exports 330,000 tons of beef products annually, or some-more than three-quarters of a sum production, especially to other European Union members.

(Reporting by Chris Borowski and Dagmara Leszkowicz; Editing by Alison Williams and Helen Massy-Beresford)

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • email
  • StumbleUpon
  • Delicious
  • Google Reader
  • LinkedIn
  • BlinkList
  • Digg
  • Google Bookmarks
  • HackerNews
  • Posterous
  • Reddit
  • Sphinn
  • Tumblr
  • Tumblr
  • Tumblr