From Positive News Media
DOH, BFAD need police to crack down on bad food sellers in Cebu markets
By
Oct 11, 2008 - 8:28:03 AM
CEBU
CITY, Oct. 12 (PNA) -– Health officials said they needed the police to
crack down on bad food sellers following the discovery of expired food
items being sold at the Carbon Public Market, Cebu City’s biggest
public market.
Officials
of the Department of Health (DOH) 7 and the Bureau of Food and Drugs
(BFAD) 7 said that while the agencies are concerned about the welfare
of consumers, they can only start an investigation once a search
warrant is presented to their office.
”If
we receive a search warrant, then we can inspect the warehouse that
sells these expired food products,” BFAD 7 section head Monina Coyoca
said.
She
suggested that law enforcement agencies like the Criminal Investigation
and Detection Group (CIDG) 7 and the National Bureau of Investigation
(NBI) 7 place the warehouse under surveillance and secure a search
warrant.
”This
issue was already presented to us last week. Three police officers came
to our office asking us what to do. We told them that the BFAD 7 could
only monitor the warehouse if we have a search warrant. It would be
better for them to coordinate with the NBI or the CIDG for surveillance
and a search warrant,” said Coyoca.
The
three men identified a warehouse in Mandaue City as the source of the
expired food items being sold at the Carbon Public Market.
If
the police could present a search warrant to the BFAD 7, the agency
would send food regulation officers to inspect the warehouse, said
Coyoca. But the men did not return.
The
Cebu City Market Authority Tuesday confiscated assorted expired goods
after receiving information that these were being sold in Carbon at
past midnight.
Among
the rotting items sold were seasonings, salad dressings, hotdogs and
other meat products, spaghetti sauce, ketchup, repacked food items like
gelatin, marshmallows and chocolate.
Eating these expired food products could have adverse affects on one’s health, acting DOH 7 Director Laksmi Legaspi said.
”It
could cause acute gastroenteritis,” said Legaspi, adding that one may
also experience vomiting, nausea, dizziness and loose bower movement.
Market
officials discovered that the labels and expiration dates on the
evaporated milk cans were also removed, which is an illegal act. (PNA)
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