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  • 6
    Mar
    2013
    8:06am, EST

    Ikea withdraws chocolate cake after tests find bacteria

    A public worker rides a bicycle in front of an Ikea shop on March 6 in Shanghai, China. Chinese authorities say they have destroyed nearly two tons of chocolate cake imported by Sweden's Ikea for violating food quality standards.

    By Peter Jeary, Senior Foreign Desk Editor, NBC News

    LONDON — Furniture chain Ikea has removed chocolate cake from store restaurants in 23 countries after authorities in China identified high levels of bacteria commonly found in human and animal feces in one batch of the treat.

    However, none of the contaminated batch had been shipped to stores in the U.S. and the food in question — an almond, chocolate and butterscotch cake — had not been sold as a take-home product.


    "This is not a product recall," Ikea spokeswoman Ylva Magnusson said. "There’s no risk that anyone has a contaminated cake at home in their freezer."

    The contamination came to light earlier this week when the Shanghai quarantine bureau revealed it had destroyed 4,100 pounds of imported Ikea chocolate cake that was found to contain excessive levels of coliform bacteria.

    The food, from a supplier based in Sweden, was destroyed in November and December, but Ikea’s head office only found out about it Monday.

    As a precaution, Ikea announced it had removed the cake from sale in 23 countries. Magnusson said there was no health risk. "None of the [affected] cakes made it to our restaurants," she said.

    Czech Republic officials say traces of horse meat were discovered in frozen packages of meatballs sent to their country for sale at furniture giant Ikea. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Some forms of coliform bacteria are commonly found in the environment and Ikea said the type found in Shanghai did not pose a health risk. However, it said its own quality controls required no coliform be present at all.

    This latest food scare came just days after Ikea's trademark meatballs were removed from sale in Europe after horse meat was found in some batches - part of a wider scandal over mislabeled meat there. The tainted batches were traced to a Sweden-based supplier. Meatballs sold in Ikea’s US stores contain only beef and pork from animals raised in the U.S. and Canada.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Related:

    Horse meat in the US? Unlikely, but tests are rare

    'Fraud on a massive scale': Europe's horse meat scandal keeps on growing

    'Criminal conspiracy' blamed for European horse-in-burger scandal

     

    32 comments

    Is it beginning to look like a furniture store is not a good place to eat or by food? "I kea" think so....

    Show more
    Explore related topics: china, sweden, food, world, safety, featured, ikea, meatballs, peter-jeary
  • Updated
    25
    Feb
    2013
    2:54pm, EST

    Horse meat found in Ikea meatballs, Czech officials say

    Czech Republic officials say traces of horse meat were discovered in frozen packages of meatballs sent to their country for sale at furniture giant Ikea. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Juergen Baetz and Karel Janicek, The Associated Press

    Traces of horse have been found in meatballs labeled as beef and pork for Swedish global furniture giant Ikea, according to authorities in the Czech Republic.

    The horse meat was found in one-kilogram packs of frozen meat balls made in Sweden and shipped to the Czech Republic for sale in Ikea stores there, the Czech State Veterinary Administration said.


    It is the latest discovery in a deepening scandal over the discovery of horse meat in ready meals sold as beef in supermarkets in Ireland, the UK and other European countries.

    Markus Schreiber / AP, file

    Ikea furniture stores also sell typical Swedish food.

    A total of 1,675 pounds of the meatballs were stopped from reaching the shelves.

    Ikea's furniture stores feature restaurants and also sell food typical of the company's home country, including the so-called Kottbullar meat balls.

    It was not immediately clear whether Ikea exported the same product to other countries. Calls seeking comment from Ikea in Sweden were not immediately returned Monday.

    The Czech authority also found horse meat in beef burgers imported from Poland during random tests of food products.

    Authorities across Europe have started doing random DNA checks after traces of horse meat turned up in frozen supermarket meals such as burgers and lasagna beginning last month.

    The European Union's agriculture ministers gathered in Brussels Monday to discuss the widening scandal's fallout, with some member states pressing for tougher rules to regain consumer confidence.

    The 27-nation bloc must agree on binding origin disclosures for food product ingredients, starting with a better labeling of meat products, German agriculture minister Ilse Aigner said.

    "Consumers have every right to the greatest-possible transparency," she insisted.

    From lasagna and burgers to children's sweets containing gelatin, horse meat has been discovered in a wide variety of "beef" products, leaving Europeans to wonder what they're really eating. NBC's Keir Simmons reports.

    The scandal began in Ireland in mid-January when the country's announced the results of its first-ever DNA tests on beef products. It tested frozen beef burgers taken from store shelves and found that more than a third of brands at five supermarkets contained at least a trace of horse. The sample of one brand sold by British supermarket kingpin Tesco was more than a quarter horse.

    Such discoveries have spread like wildfire across Europe as governments, supermarkets, meat traders and processors began their own DNA testing of products labeled beef and have been forced to withdraw tens of millions of products from store shelves.

    More than a dozen nations have detected horse flesh in processed products such as factory-made burger patties, lasagnas, meat pies and meat-filled pastas. The investigations have been complicated by elaborate supply chains involving multiple cross-border middlemen. 

    Related:

    Horse meat in the US? Unlikely, but tests are rare

    'Fraud on a massive scale': Europe's horse meat scandal keeps on growing

    'Criminal conspiracy' blamed for European horse-in-burger scandal

    This story was originally published on Mon Feb 25, 2013 6:57 AM EST

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    177 comments

    Wilberger. Still cracks me up. Worked on a loading dock- warehouse for a few years and we would get meat "trimmings" from Down Under. I always wondered if any 'roos were in it. Never could figure out how a kill plant, load it on a ship, unload it at a port, load it on the truck and deliver it across …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: business, europe, food, world, agriculture, farming, beef, featured, ikea, updated, horse-meat
  • 16
    Feb
    2013
    4:32am, EST

    'Fraud on a massive scale': Europe's horse meat scandal keeps on growing

    Bernd Thissen / AFP - Getty Images

    A laboratory assistant prepares a sample of lasagna for a DNA test at a veterinary research facility in Germany Thursay.

    By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

    LONDON -- When officials in Ireland made a routine check on a few hamburgers, what they found made them nervous: One burger was actually nearly one-third horse.

    It was a discovery that has sent shock waves reverberating across Europe.

    Since the disturbing DNA test results were disclosed last month, horse meat has been found masquerading as beef in countries including the U.K., France, Germany, Sweden and Norway. 

    A small amount of horse meat was also found by British officials to contain a banned drug that, in high enough doses, could be fatal, although U.K. Chief Medical Officer Sally Davies has stressed there is a "very low risk indeed" that eating contaminated meat would be harmful.

    As supermarket shelves were cleared, meat suppliers in Ireland, the U.K., France, Cyprus, the Netherlands, Romania and elsewhere have come under scrutiny.

    Jean-Philippe Arles / Reuters

    A dump truck is filled up with blocks of meat at French meat processor Spanghero's factory in Castelnaudary near Toulouse, France, Friday.

    Some in Western Europe have pointed the finger particularly at Romania, where a ban on horses in cities and the tough economic climate have been cited as reasons for a rise in exports of horse meat. The Romanians have insisted the meat was properly labeled as horse when it left the country, Reuters reported. 

    According to French investigators, one French firm alone made a profit of $733,800 over six months by selling cheaper horse meat as beef in a supply chain involving 28 companies in 13 countries, Reuters reported. The company, Spanghero, protested its innocence Friday.

    Intelligence agency Europol -- normally tasked with combating the trafficking of guns, drugs and humans -- was brought in to investigate what one British lawmaker has described as an “international criminal conspiracy.” Three arrests -- the first over the scandal -- were made in the U.K. on Thursday. 

    Expert: Watch what you eat
    Some officials believe only the “tip of the iceberg” has been revealed, and on Friday the European Union endorsed a major DNA-testing program to establish just how much unlabeled horse meat is being sold as beef or other foods.

    For ManMohan Sodhi, a professor specializing in supply chains at London’s City University, the news has been a revelation.

    “If you had talked to me a month ago, I would have said: ‘No, it would never happen; I completely believe in the [food supply] system,’” he said.

    Now his message is “Watch out for what you eat.”

    The U.K. has ordered thousands of beef products be tested - as companies recall ready-to-eat meals bought by millions after finding horsemeat in lasagna. ITV'S Chris Choy reports.

    Sodhi compared the current situation to the first signs of the gross mismanagement of subprime mortgages that led to the banking crisis. “People began to uncover risks and suddenly there were too many problems,” he said.

    He said large supermarkets like to deal with large suppliers who are in turn supplied by other firms and so on down to farmers and other actual food producers. At any point in the chain, someone could decide to cut costs by replacing a high-cost food with a cheap substitute.

    Sodhi explained it was not in the interest of supermarkets to check their suppliers. This, he said, would be an added expense and would also make them legally liable if something went wrong.

    Taking goods on trust meant they instead had “plausible deniability,” he said. “Then if something bad happens, all I do is put out an advertisement and say, ‘We really care about our customers, we’re doing everything we can … too bad somebody did something horrible.”

    In a video message, Tim Smith, group technical director of supermarket giant Tesco, spoke of the firm's "unreserved apology" over the discovery of horse DNA in its frozen hamburgers and said it had dropped a supplier in Ireland.

    But he also stressed the company was taking steps to ensure this never happened again.

    Smith said Tesco planned to "launch a new program of activity which will test on a DNA fingerprinting basis all the meat and meat products that we source from our suppliers ... adding another layer of surveillance to help protect our customers."

    On Thursday, a Tesco spokesman was unable to clarify exactly how extensive the DNA tests would be.

    'Cynically and systematically duped'
    Sodhi’s opinion that things could be far worse than they currently appear might be dismissed by some.

    But a committee of British lawmakers that investigated the situation published a report Thursday that concluded the discoveries so far were “likely to be the tip of the iceberg” amid “suggestion of fraud on a massive scale.”

    The committee concluded that it appeared consumers had been “cynically and systematically duped in pursuit of profit by elements within the food industry.”

    “This scandal has also raised broader food policy questions about cheap food production, transparency, consumer confidence and pressures within the supply chain,” it added.

    There are suggestions that traditional butcher’s stores have benefited from the furor.

    Toby Melville / Reuters

    Danny Lidgate hangs meat in the cold store area of Lidgates butchers in London Wednesday, as traditional butchers report a surge in demand from consumers.

    Roger Kelsey, of the National Federation of Meat & Food Traders, estimated his members had seen an increase of up to 50 percent in demand for sausages, ground beef and burgers, according to the BBC. The British Retail Consortium, which represents supermarkets, has insisted their sales have not suffered.

    Family-run store Aubrey Allen, of Leamington Spa, was named the U.K.’s Butcher’s Shop of the Year 2012 and was recently given a royal warrant to supply meat, poultry and game to Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II.

    Russell Allen, who was born into the business, said supermarkets would “push and squeeze” and “bully their suppliers” to cut costs.

    But he also said ordinary people shared some of the blame for the horse meat scandal by providing the demand for very cheap food.

    “If you are buying five burgers for a pound ($1.55), I kind of think you get what you deserve," he said. "It suggests you don’t care, so why would you suddenly care?”

    Allen said he thought people should eat better quality meat and have it less often.

    He lamented the loss of a culture of cooking. Now, he said, people don't know what to do with cheaper cuts of meat and view him as strange for having homemade soup for lunch.

    “Generally people say, ‘I don’t have time to cook’ and I say, ‘Well, you’ve got time to watch people cooking [on television],’” he said.

    Allen said butcher’s shops were making something of a comeback after many were put out of business by supermarkets in the 1970s and 1980s.

    But he admitted mass-produced food was probably here to stay. “I think it’s possibly a necessary evil on some levels. Not everyone can afford to, not everyone has the luxury of eating quality products all the time,” he said.

    'Going on for years'
    Frenchman Michel Roux Jr., whose restaurant Le Gavroche is one of Britain’s best, also criticized supermarkets for putting pressure on their suppliers and suggested the horse meat scandal was not a recent occurrence.

    “I’m sure that it’s been going on for years, absolutely years,” he said. “It’s being done on a nod and a wink.”

    Roux said he remembered as a child eating roast horse and horse burgers. And he suggested a legitimate market for horse meat might be a positive step.

    Related: Horse slaughtering legal in US, but public won't bite

    “Horse meat is a good meat … maybe in Britain we should embrace it, we should be eating more,” Roux said.

    He said the flavor was “not too dissimilar to beef, slightly sweeter and richer,” admitting it wasn’t his favorite.

    However, asked if he would put horse meat on his menu, he replied, “Not as yet.”

    In Ireland, the officials who uncovered that first horse meat burger and several others with trace amounts can scarcely believe what has transpired since they went public on Jan. 15. 

    Ray Ellard, director of The Food Safety Authority of Ireland, said they had been “not expecting to find too much” when they carried out a small survey of beef products.

    “We were kind of … I wouldn’t say taken aback, but that’s kind of the truth,” Ellard said. “We were wondering, ‘What’s going on here?’ and wanted to be absolutely sure of the science of what we were doing.”

    “We set out to do something fairly simple. We didn’t know it was going to end up where it is,” Ellard added. “It’s been painful for a lot of the food industry, some people have had reputational damage.”

    “We’re glad in one way. Systems will all improve and the potential for defrauding people will be a lot less. We’re glad that that’s happened, but we had a nervous few days, I can tell you.”

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related:

    European horse meat scandal spreads amid fears harmful drug entered human food chain

    'Criminal conspiracy' blamed for European horse-in-burger scandal

    Hamburgers pulled from UK supermarket shelves after tests reveal horsemeat


    373 comments

    Well driving a friend of mine to his daily burger king lunch, i couldnt help but notice he stamped his foot 3 times when asked, how many burgers he wanted!

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    Explore related topics: france, ireland, europe, food, world, family, uk, beef, featured, supermarkets, horsemeat, ian-johnston
  • 2
    Jan
    2013
    8:46am, EST

    Backlash forces shark fin traders onto Hong Kong rooftops

    Antony Dickson / AFP - Getty Images

    Shark fins drying in the sun cover the roof of a factory building in Hong Kong on Jan. 2, 2013.

    Paul Hilton / EPA

    Approximately 18 thousand shark fins are left out to dry on top of an industrial building in Hong Kong's Kennedy Town district on Jan. 2, 2013.

    Bobby Yip / Reuters

    Shark fins, which cost between HK$2,880 ($369) and HK$3,580 ($459) per Chinese catty (1 pound), are seen on display inside a dried seafood store in Hong Kong on Jan. 2, 2013.

    Shark fin traders in Hong Kong have taken to drying freshly sliced fins on rooftops since a public outcry over them drying the fins on public sidewalks forced them to move the trade out of sight. 

    Activists have raised concerns that the over-harvesting of fins is causing an environmental calamity. Although sales have fallen in recent years Hong Kong remains one of the world's biggest markets for shark fins, which are used to make soup that is an expensive staple at Chinese banquets.  

    -- European Pressphoto Agency, Agence France-Presse, Reuters

    Bobby Yip / Reuters

    Thousands of pieces of shark fin are dried on the rooftop of a factory building in Hong Kong on Jan. 2, 2013. The fins were shipped from an unknown location and unloaded at a nearby pier to be dried on the rooftop.

    Bobby Yip / Reuters

    Workers lay out pieces of shark fin to dry on a rooftop of a factory building in Hong Kong on Jan. 2, 2013. Local sales of the luxurious gourmet food have fallen in recent years due to its controversial nature, but activists demand a total shark fin ban in the city, labelled by some as the shark fin capital of the world.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    •Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    25 comments

    When we've finally killed all of the sharks in the ocean and forever upset the balance of the world's waters - only then will we see the stupidity of our ways. We don't deserve this wonderous Earth that we inhabit.

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    Explore related topics: food, hong-kong, asia, shark, world-news, shark-fin
  • 15
    Oct
    2012
    10:59pm, EDT

    Wal-mart seeks big suppliers in India, where most farms are small

    All photos by Vivek Prakash / Reuters

    Labourers sort through and grade harvested tomatoes on a farm that supplies fresh produce to Wal-Mart in Narayangaon, about 112 miles west of Mumbai.

    Labourers harvest tomatoes on a farm that supplies fresh produce to Wal-Mart in Narayangaon.

    Two-wheelers move past the newly opened Bharti Wal-Mart Best Price Modern wholesale store in the southern Indian city of Hyderabad.

    Workers walk inside an aisle of the newly opened Bharti Wal-Mart Best Price Modern wholesale store.

    Reuters reports that India requires Wal-mart to source 30 percent of its goods from local, small industries, and therefore plans to sign up 35,000 farmers in the next three years:

    Wal-Mart must buy in small batches from small plot-holders in a country where more than 80 percent of farms are under 2 hectares. That means contracting with thousands of farmers will still yield only a few thousand metric tons. In North America, retailers like Wal-Mart can buy from a few hundred farmers who provide hundreds of thousands of metric tons of produce between them.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    3 comments

    If our government required every company selling at retail in the US to have 35% of its product grown or produced in the US, Walmart would go out of business. Walmart is the biggest exporter in existence for the government of China. Walmart paid for China's first aircraft carrier and has made a dow …

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    Explore related topics: business, farm, india, food, wal-mart, agriculture, world-news
  • 9
    Oct
    2012
    7:35am, EDT

    Rafiq Maqbool / AP

    Malnourished children eat a meal at the Apanalaya center, an organization working for the betterment of slum children, in Mumbai, India on Oct. 9, 2012. The United Nations now says its 2009 headline-grabbing announcement that 1 billion people in the world were hungry was off-target and that the number is actually more like 870 million.

    One in eight of world population going hungry: UN

    Reuters reports — One out of every eight people in the world is chronically undernourished, the United Nations' food agencies said on Tuesday, warning that progress to reduce hunger has slowed since 2007/08 when high food prices sparked riots in several poor countries.

    In their latest report on food insecurity, the UN agencies estimated that 868 million people were suffering hunger in 2010-2012, or about 12.5 percent of the world's population, down more sharply than previously estimated from about 1 billion, or 18.6 percent in 1990-92.

    The new figures are lower than the last estimates for recent years that pegged the number of hungry people at 925 million in 2010 and 1.02 billion in 2009. Read the full story.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    25 comments

    For that matter the USA Government could ...........NeverMind .....they are wasting a trillion or 2 on wars.

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    Explore related topics: india, food, hunger, south-asia, world-news
  • 5
    Oct
    2012
    5:38am, EDT

    Snacking tourists fined after Rome declares 'War on the Sandwich'

    Andreas Solaro / AFP - Getty Images, file

    Tourists seek shade from the sun on the steps of Piazza di Spagna in central Rome on July 30.

    By Claudio Lavanga, NBC News

    ROME -- It’s one of the highlights of any trip to Rome: Sitting on the Spanish Steps eating a real Italian gelato. But on Oct. 1, it became a potentially costly vacation memory.

    The mayor of the "eternal city" has made it illegal to eat snacks and junk food on or around its monuments.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Tourists will still be allowed to eat while they walk, but stop with a bag of chips in your hands or sit down while chewing on your panino, and you are eligible for a fine of 25 to 500 euros ($32 to $650). An Italian daily newspaper dubbed it the “War on the Sandwich.”

    Dressed in their white and blue uniforms, local police officers Alessio Valentini and Magdi Adib were on patrol Thursday looking for anyone daring to flout the new law.

    They shoved away a group of young Dutch tourists who sat next to the Colosseum to enjoy their pizzas. “Go, go,” Adib told the bemused boys, who didn’t know which crime they had committed.

    'Out of control'
    The officers told NBC News they had fined seven tourists -- all foreigners -- since the morning. The standard penalty was 50 euros ($65).

    “We could have given tickets to many more, but you have to apply some reason,” Adib said. “If they drink a bottle of water it’s OK, but if they camp out, we fine them.”

    “Eating on monuments can really get out of control,” he added. “Once I caught a group of tourists who set a table on the Spanish Steps, with table cloth and cutlery! This has to stop.”

    Andreas Solaro / AFP - Getty Images, file

    Tourists enjoy ice cream in central Rome on July 30, before the new decree came into force.

    Valentini agreed with his partner. “I once caught a tourist chopping a watermelon in the fountain at Piazza Navona,” he told NBC News. “Now we have a way to stop them.”

    Rome's leaning Colosseum has experts worried

    A young German tourist, who was sitting nearby and eating a sandwich, couldn’t believe it at first when told about the decree.

    “What? It’s full of food carts around here … where am I supposed to eat?” he said.

    Tourists sitting on the Spanish Steps shared his bewilderment.

    Both a Chinese tourist eating ice cream from a cup and a Romanian digging from a bag of chips while admiring the sunset over Via Condotti pointed out that there were no signs explaining the new law and asked how were they supposed to know about the rule.

    When asked about this complaint, three local policemen patrolling the area told NBC News that there was no need for a sign.

    “It’s common sense,” one officer said. “You can’t dirty such a beautiful and historical monument with ice cream and bread crumbs just because you can sit on it.”

    They too had handed out many fines, but worried that in the end the penalty would not be paid.

    “Most of them are foreigners, so I doubt they will pay the ticket before they go back to their countries," the officer said. "It’s more likely they’ll keep it as a souvenir."

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Tourists fined as Rome declares 'War on the Sandwich'
    • Venezuela vote: Oil wealth to trump calls for change?
    • Scientists: Great Barrier Reef coral seeing 'major decline'
    • Saudi Arabia's Ikea catalog is missing something: women
    • From war zones, photographer brings scars, searing images
    • Death threats force Afghan actress into hiding
    • Stay informed: Sign up for our newsletter

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    450 comments

    “It’s common sense,” one officer said. “You can’t dirty such a beautiful and historical monument with ice cream and bread crumbs just because you can sit on it.” This officer should take a walk through the nearby district of Trastevere to see all the graffiti, dog …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: italy, food, sandwich, rome, eating, featured, monuments, claudio-lavanga
  • 17
    Jul
    2012
    10:56am, EDT

    Big cheese: Italy cops arrest mozzarella king over mafia links

    AFP PHOTO / Italian Police

    Giuseppe Mandara, center, head of the biggest buffalo mozzarella manufacturing company in Italy, walks alongside policemen from the Anti-Mafia unit of the Italian police, after his arrest near Naples on Tuesday.

    By NBC News staff

    Police in Italy on Tuesday arrested the head of the country’s biggest buffalo mozzarella cheese maker and seized assets worth 100 million euros ($123 million) on suspicion of links to organized crime.

    Giuseppe Mandara, who once called himself the "Armani of Mozzarella" in an interview, is thought to have been linked to a Naples mafia clan, according to a report by European news agency Agence France-Presse.


    A report in Italy’s Il Denaro newspaper [link in Italian] said investigators believe Mandara received a bailout from the mafia when he was in financial trouble in the 1980s.

    The Mandara Group is a major global exporter of buffalo mozzarella and is sold by large chains in Europe, Japan and the United States, AFP reported.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The investigation also includes charges of misleading consumers after the company was found to have mixed in cow milk with more expensive buffalo milk and labeled batches of ordinary provolone cheese as the more prestigious kind.

    "We have seized the whole company," Paolo Di Napoli, an officer from the environmental protection arm of the Carabinieri police, told AFP.

    Buffalo mozzarella sells in Italy for around 12 euros ($15) per kilo and can cost more than twice as much abroad, AFP said.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Fire breaks out in Istanbul high-rise building
    • In Pakistan's largest city, 'Old Glory' is flammable and profitable
    • Two killed, 19 wounded in Toronto party shooting
    • US vessel fires on boat in Gulf, killing one and injuring three
    • Clashes break out in Syrian capital after civil war designation raises stakes
    • Egypt tops agenda during Clinton trip to Israel
    • Egypt's ex-leader Mubarak ordered back to prison

    Follow World News on NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    13 comments

    "The investigation also includes charges of misleading consumers after the company was found to have mixed in cow milk with more expensive buffalo milk and labeled batches of ordinary provolone cheese as the more prestigious kind." I guess this new meaning to that time honored phrase "Who cut the ch …

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    Explore related topics: italy, europe, food, fraud, crime, mafia, cheese, featured
  • 18
    Jun
    2012
    8:23am, EDT

    Report: World's population is 17 million tons overweight

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    Obesity is threatening the world’s future food security, according to a study published Monday that calculated the weight of the global population at 316 million tons.

    Researchers from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine said increasing levels of fatness around the world could have the same impact on global resources as an extra half a billion people.

    In a report published in the journal BMC Public Health [PDF file here], the researchers estimated that 17 million tons of the global body mass was due to people being overweight.


    Despite only making up five per cent of the world's population, the United States accounts for almost a third of the world's weight due to obesity, the researchers found.

    In contrast, Asia has 61 per cent of the world's population but only 13 per cent of the world's weight due to obesity.

    When working out is too much of a good thing 

    The study is published to coincide with the largest-ever United Nations conference, Rio+20, which will discuss sustainable development.

    Using World Health Organization data from 2005, the scientists calculated the average global body weight at 137 pounds, but in North America the average was 178 pounds.

    Get off your butt and exercise, orders your doc 

    One of the authors of the paper, Professor Ian Roberts, told the BBC: "When people think about environmental sustainability, they immediately focus on population. Actually, when it comes down to it, it’s not how many mouths there are to feed, it is how much flesh there is on the planet."

    "If every country in the world had the same level of fatness that we see in the USA, in weight terms that would be like an extra billion people of world average body mass," he added.

    Roberts said health campaigns and urban design that promotes walking or cycling were among the best ways to tackle the problem, which was primarily caused by sedentary modern lifestyles.

    “We do not move our bodies so much but we are biologically programmed to eat,” he told the Daily Telegraph. "We often point the finger at poor women in Africa having too many babies. But we've also got to think of this fatness thing; it's part of the same issue of exceeding our planetary limits."

    126 comments

    It has always bordered me that we have so many overweight people here in america, but yet we have people who go to bed hungry. We have children who only have a decent meal in school.

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    Explore related topics: food, health, obesity, environment, poverty, population, weight, featured
  • 15
    Jun
    2012
    10:15am, EDT

    Public outcry helps lift ban on 9-year-old food blogger

    Courtesy of David Payne

    Scottish schoolgirl Martha Payne, 9, can now continue blogging about her school lunches -- which often leave something to be desired, like the sad-looking pizza and croquette above.

    By Scott Stump

    A ban on a popular food blog documenting school lunches run by a 9-year-old girl in West Scotland was reversed Friday after a firestorm on social media.

    Martha Payne, who goes by “VEG,’’ on her blog, NeverSeconds, posted on Thursday that she was told she was no longer allowed to take photos of the food in the cafeteria of her school, Lochgilphead Primary in Argyll. The blog had spurred discussion over the quality of school food offerings and received more than two million page views while grabbing the attention of British celebrity chef Jamie Oliver.

    Story: Food blogger, 9, crusades for better school lunches

    Oliver initially helped catapult the blog to success by linking to it in a tweet to his 2 million of followers, saying, “Shocking but inspirational blog. Keep going. Big love from Jamie x.” After hearing of the ban, Oliver again expressed his support via Twitter Friday, urging Martha to "stay strong."

    Twitter

    After the ensuing outcry over the ban on Twitter and other social media, Roddy McCuish, the leader of the Argyll and Bute Council, made the decision to allow her to continue posting photos on her blog, deeming the ban a form of censorship.

    “There's no place for censorship in the Argyll and Bute council and never has been and there never will be,’’ McCuish told BBC radio. “I've just instructed senior officials to immediately withdraw the ban on pictures from the school dining hall. It's a good thing to do, to change your mind, and I've certainly done that."


    Follow @todayfood

    Martha's father, David, told TODAY.com via email that "Martha is very pleased the ban has been lifted and she's looking forward to continuing to blog," adding, "She is more pleased at the incredible response to Mary's Meals and is beaming." Mary's Meals is a charity that brings food to hungry children and Martha has been helping raise money for the organization through her blog. 

    The council’s main ire came from a headline in a Scottish newspaper saying “Time to Fire the School Dinner Ladies,’’ in reaction to Payne's depiction of the food offerings.

    McCuish’s reversal came only hours after the council had issued a statement saying “Argyll and Bute Council wholly refutes the unwarranted attacks on its schools catering service which culminated in national press headlines which have led catering staff to fear for their jobs."

    The council went on to say that the blog "misrepresented the options" in the cafeteria, and that the ban was needed to "protect staff from the distress and harm [the blog] was causing."

    McCuish said he will be getting to the bottom of how the ban was enacted and who was responsible.

    “I will be dealing with that in due course,’’ he said. “I don’t know what went wrong, but I will do my best to find out.”

    He added that there have been no complaints regarding the catering in the school up to now and that he is “comfortable’’ with the catering in the school. He also said that the cafeteria women who came under fire in the newspaper articles have “100 percent backing’’ from him.

    In a previous interview, Martha told TODAY.com that since she started blogging about her lunches, “The sizes have improved but it’s not still the nicest food.”

    More from TODAY Food:

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    • Andrew Zimmern: Filipino food is the 'next big thing'
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    • Video: Pizza-tossing seven-year-old, a YouTube hit 

    84 comments

    I'd be pissed if my kid was being fed that by a public school. Is it so friggin' hard to just make the kids a turkey sandwich on wheat with a side of salad?

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    Explore related topics: food, schools, cafeteria, martha-payne, west-scotland, argyll-and-bute, roddy-mcguish, never-seconds, dave-payne
  • 31
    May
    2012
    4:56pm, EDT

    Drinking beer at the London Olympics will cost you

    Eddie Keogh / Reuters file

    A brand of beer is seen on a pump at the Railway Tavern pub in east London Feb. 2, 2012. Built around 1825, the pub is across the road from the athlete's village. The landlady for the past 40 years Jan Dooner said: "I'm hoping for some good business during the Games, whether they want to celebrate or drown their sorrows."

     

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Spectators hoping to enjoy the London 2012 Olympic Games with a cool brew in hand will have to shell out the equivalent of about $11 for a pint of beer, according to organizers.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    London Olympics organizers announced Wednesday they expected to serve 14 million meals during the games, calling it "the largest peace time catering operation in the world."

    "We have gone to great lengths to find top quality, tasty food that celebrates the best of Britain," said Paul Deighton, chief executive of organizing committee LOCOG.


    "We believe that our prices are more than comparable to those found at other major sporting events, which because of their temporary nature are often more expensive than the high street."

    A bottle of water will cost 1.60 pounds ($2.50) and a bottle of Coke will sell for 2.30 pounds ($3.60). A plate of fish and chips will go for 8 pounds ($12.50).

    Many were outraged by the prices, and particularly the cost of beer, British newspaper The Telegraph reported.

    An 11-ounce bottle of Heineken lager will cost 4.20 pounds or $6.50, which makes the equivalent price of a pint 7.23 pounds or $11. That's more than double the national average price of 3.17 pounds for a pint of beer in the UK, The Telegraph said.

    Organizers said food and drink for a family of four should run under 40 pounds ($62).

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    56 comments

    Who would go and pay those kind of prices.....................?????

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    Explore related topics: olympics, food, london, beer, featured, locog
  • 18
    May
    2012
    5:16pm, EDT

    US agriculture companies pledge millions to Africa

    NBC's Rohit Kachroo visited an irrigation project in Turkana, Kenya, where famine has taken the lives of thousands, and witnessed how it changed the lives of many. Meanwhile, President Barack Obama has announced a plan to boost farm productivity in Africa and alleviate hunger worldwide.

     

    By Reuters

    A group of U.S. seed, chemical and equipment companies will invest at least $150 million over the next few years into African agricultural projects and products, the companies said on Friday. 

    The investments pledged by DuPont, Monsanto, Cargill and others are part of an overall $3 billion effort by companies around the world announced by President Barack Obama.

    Along with companies from India, Israel, Switzerland, Norway and the United Kingdom, and 20 companies from Africa, the corporations have committed some $3 billion for projects to help farmers in the developing world build local markets and improve productivity.


    The United Nations has said that by 2030, the world will need at least 50 percent more food, 45 percent more energy and 30 percent more water. Absent these resources, it said, up to 3 billion people would probably be condemned into poverty.

    Capitalizing on food demand in Africa also holds strong profit potential, corporate leaders said.

    "It has been a bit chaotic. There are all sorts of issues around the countries in Africa. But the population, the economic growth, the quality of many of the soils is there," DuPont Executive Vice President Jim Borel told Reuters in an interview. "The need is there, the potential is there."

    USAID's Rajiv Shah explains how 45 businesses will invest in reforming agriculture at the grassroots level to help alleviate hunger in Africa.

    "We're convinced we can take the base we have now, and accelerate that progress," said Borel, who oversees DuPont's food and nutrition businesses. Among DuPont's units is its Pioneer Hi-Bred International seed company, which has operated in Africa for decades.

    India and China are more stable and growing faster, but Africa is "not far behind," according to Borel.

    The push by global corporations to spend more money and develop new markets across Africa comes as an expanding world population and growing demand for quality food threaten to exceed existing limits of agricultural production.

    Investors have been buying up farmland in Africa, hoping to make it more productive using modern agricultural technologies. That, combined with the rising interest of international agricultural corporations, has brought criticism.

    Advocates for African farmers fear they will lose control over their food supply and markets. They say African farmers are being displaced and unsustainable farm practices are being introduced.

    "The problem is all this is based on large-scale commercial agriculture," said Anuradha Mittal, executive director of the Oakland Institute, a policy think tank. "Who does it benefit? All of these things are supporting the formation of large-scale commercial agriculture, which will hurt small farmers. They could spend far less but focus on providing credit facilities, ensuring open markets and ensuring the rights of small holder farmers." 

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    27 comments

    You all miss the whole problem. More food, will only make the situation WORSE. They will increasetheir population by 400%. They are Malignant Breeders. they have as much environmental sense as my dogs and cat. I took my dogs and cat to the vet to get sterilized,.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: food, africa, kenya, obama, famine, rohit-kachroo
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