Yum Brands Inc's fast-food chain KFC was supplied with
chicken in China that contained excessive amounts of antibiotics, said food
safety authorities investigating allegations of tainted KFC products. The
finding by the Shanghai Food and Drug Administration (SFDA) deals a blow to
KFC's reputation in China, where it is facing fierce competition from the likes
of Taiwanese-owned fried chicken chain Dico and Japanese-style noodle chain
Ajisen (China) Holdings Ltd. Yum Brands has forecast a drop in same store China
sales in the fourth quarter.
People dine at a Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC) outlet in Shanghai (Aly Song Reuters, REUTERS /February 3, 2010)
Eight of the 19 batches of chicken samples Yum Brands sent
to a testing laboratory in 2010 and 2011 contained overly high levels of
antibiotics, the SFDA said in a statement on its Website late on Thursday. An
investigation is underway to determine whether Yum Brands had taken corrective
measures at that time, and the Louisville, Kentucky-based company may face
harsh penalties if the probe showed laws had been violated, the SFDA said.
Shares in Yum Brands have slumped 4 percent since December
18 when China's state television CCTV reported that some poultry suppliers in
eastern Shandong province had fed chickens with anti-viral drugs and hormones
to accelerate their growth. The SFDA is looking into the CCTV report and has
not released its findings yet, but authorities in Shandong have already shut
two chicken farms in eastern China, including one that supplied KFC and
McDonald's Corp, the official Shanghai Daily newspaper reported on Thursday.
Officials at Yum Brands in China could not be immediately
reached for comment. KFC's subsidiary in China has pledged to cooperate with
the authorities, while McDonald's wrote on its official microblog that its
chicken and raw materials pass through independent, third-party laboratory
tests. Shares in Yum Brands, which also owns Pizza Hut and Taco Bell, closed 1
percent lower at $69.49 in New York on Thursday. China has been trying to stamp
out health violations that have dogged the country's food sector amid reports
of fake cooking oil, tainted milk and even exploding watermelons. In 2008, milk
laced with the industrial chemical melamine killed at least six children and
sickened nearly 300,000.
Source: Chicago Tribune
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