A total of 1,253 Chinese children have fallen ill after drinking contaminated milk powder, and two babies have died, China's health ministry says.
It confirmed the big jump in the numbers affected at a news conference. "As many as 10,000 infants may have drunk the contaminated Sanlu milk powder," vice health minister Ma Shaowei warned.
Meanwhile, the New Zealand government has accused the company concerned - and local officials - of failing to act. The company at the centre of the growing scandal, Sanlu Group, is part-owned by New Zealand's Fonterra Cooperative, the country's biggest dairy producer. The New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark said her government contacted Beijing directly, after alerting the company and officials but to no avail.
Estimates rising
Mr Ma said in Beijing that 340 children remained in hospital, and that out of these 53 were in a serious condition.
In this case we frankly have sabotage of a product. Our hearts go out to the parents and the infants who were affected Andrew Ferrier Fonterra chief executive |
Government told
New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark said her government learned of the contamination problem on September 5, then three days later decided to inform Beijing after local Chinese officials refused to act. New Zealand ambassador to China Tony Brown was deputised to tell the Chinese government. "We were the whistle-blowers and they [the Chinese government] leapt in and ensured there was action on the ground," Ms Clark said. Fonterra had "been trying for weeks to get official recall and the local authorities in China would not do it", Ms Clark told TVNZ. "I think the first inclination was to try and put a towel over it and deal with it without an official recall," she said. Meanwhile, Sanlu's minority partner, Fonterra, has accused Sanlu of sabotage. "In this case we frankly have sabotage of a product," Fonterra's chief executive Andrew Ferrier told reporters. "Our hearts go out to the parents and the infants who were affected," he added. Under pressure in New Zealand to explain why Fonterra had not gone public with its concerns about the product sooner, Mr Ferrier said his conscience was clear. He said Fonterra had known of the contamination in early August and wanted an immediate recall but that Sanlu had had to abide by Chinese rules.
"We together with Sanlu have done everything that we possibly could to get the product off the shelf," Ferrier said, speaking to New Zealand reporters by video from Singapore.
Arrests
All 19 people detained in connection with the scandal so far are from the stations which pick up milk from dairy farmers, the state-controlled China Daily newspaper reported. It said the contamination probably happened at the milk-collecting stations. Meanwhile, state news agency Xinhua reported that two brothers had been arrested, having allegedly added melamine to the 3 tonnes of milk they sold on from farmers every day. Taiwan said late on Sunday it was banning all imports of Sanlu dairy products immediately. It is not believed that the milk powder was exported to any other country. In 2004, at least 13 babies died in the eastern province of Anhui after drinking fake milk powder. Melamine was linked to the deaths and illness of thousands of cats and dogs in the United States last year after it was added to pet food components exported from China.