The agriculture ministry in Dublin said on Wednesday that Irish pork products can go back on sale.
The agriculture ministry in Dublin said on Wednesday that Irish pork products can go back on sale.
Irish pork products can go back on sale, so long as processors can prove the meat was not from herds believed to be contaminated by dioxins, the agriculture ministry in Dublin said Wednesday.In a statement, it said Agriculture, Fisheries and Food Minister Brendan Smith "today confirmed that all the necessary controls are now in place to enable the restoration of supplies of Irish pork and bacon to consumers".
If processors can prove that "individual consignments of pig meat or pig meat products were entirely derived from pigs which did not come from any of the restricted pig herds, then these consignments can be released onto the market", the statement said.
Nine pig producer operations in the republic have been sealed off since the discovery of cancer-causing dioxins in slaughtered pigs prompted the recall on Saturday of all Irish pigmeat.
Cows were later also found to be affected, but health authorities stressed the risks posed to the public were "extremely low" and there would be no recall of Irish beef.
The recall has caused panic in Ireland at a time when many families would have been buying their traditional Christmas ham, and dealt another blow to the recession-hit Irish economy.
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Ireland is a major exporter of pork with 129,000 tonnes, worth 368 million euros (466 million dollars), sent to international customers last year.
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Source-AFP
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