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Last Modified: 28 Mar 2008
Source: PA News

The European Commission has demanded Italy take "urgent measures" in response to a contaminated mozzarella scare or risk a Europe-wide ban on the sale of the cheese.

A statement issued in Brussels accused the authorities of doing too little to ensure that no contaminated mozzarella goes on sale.

But Italian Agriculture Minister Paolo De Castro insisted in Rome that there was no health problem surrounding mozzarella - and tucked into some in front of the cameras to prove his point.

The mozzarella in question is produced in the Campania region of Italy, which includes the city of Naples, and is still in the grip of a prolonged and massive waste-management problem exacerbated by the dumping of illegal industrial toxic waste from the north.

The waste industry in the region is under Mafia control and the crisis is believed to have generated contamination now infiltrating the prized buffalo mozzarella sector.

Japan and South Korea have already banned the cheese and the Commission had given the Italian authorities a deadline of 5pm on Thursday to supply full information about the extent of the problem.

Failure to do so, warned a spokeswoman, would trigger EU "safeguard measures" under which the Commission has powers to order the removal of buffalo mozzarella from the shelves in EU shops, or ban imports altogether.

Information supplied to the Commission by Rome included reassurance that the dioxin problem had been contained within the Campania region and a promise that no mozzarella cheese containing higher than the permissible levels of dioxins has been traded outside Italy.

But after the deadline passed, the Commission made clear it had still not received the necessary information about how officials are coping with excessive dioxin levels said to have already hit as many as 80 buffalo farms and two dozen dairy farms.

The Commission said Italy had reported checking samples of buffalo milk and buffalo mozzarella at 130 production sites, but only found dioxins above maximum EU limits in 25.The buffalo farms supplying the 25 establishments had been traced and their milk destroyed.

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