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Food Minister’s brother runs company at centre of latest horsemeat scandal

Embarrassment for Simon Coveney after latest scandal


Ireland’s Food Minister Simon Coveney’s brother Patrick was dragged into the horsemeat scandal that has hit Ireland’s beef industry hard.
Ireland’s Food Minister Simon Coveney’s brother Patrick was dragged into the horsemeat scandal that has hit Ireland’s beef industry hard.
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Ireland’s Food Minister Simon Coveney has been left red faced after his brother Patrick was dragged into the horsemeat scandal that has hit the country’s beef industry hard.

The Irish Sun newspaper reports that Patrick Coveney is the chief executive of the huge Greencore food company whose products have tested positive for horsemeat.

Greencore manufactured products have been taken off the shelves by British supermarket giant Asda after positive tests on a beef bolognaise sauce product.

The paper reports that Asda have withdrawn that product and three others as a precaution, all manufactured in Bristol by Greencore which has its HQ in Dublin.

The Irish government, whose food policy is Simon Coveney’s responsibility, have warned that the country is facing an epidemic according to the reports.

Thousands of jobs may now be at risk after the latest scares surrounding horsemeat in beef products.
The report says that a factory in Tipperary owned by Larry Goodman’s ABP Group supplied meat for the sauce pulled from shelves in Britain after it tested positive for equine DNA.

The meat was passed by ABP to Greencore who made Asda’s Chosen By You Beef Bolognese Sauce.

In a statement, Greencore said: “We can confirm that we supplied the Chosen By You 350g Beef Bolognese Sauce that Asda has withdrawn following the detection of traces of equine DNA in a screening test.

“The company is currently awaiting the results of further quantitative tests that will validate the presence and the extent of the equine DNA.”

Minister Coveney said earlier this week that European ministers were ‘determined to get to the bottom’ of the issue.

He said: “I suspect that this isn’t just one trader, one rogue trader in one country, I think that it’s broader than that.”


See more: Irish Food , Irish News , Irish Business
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5 Comments

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More worrying than who is employed by who, is how long has this being going on and to what scale.
surprised,why?politico.
The Food Safety Authority of Ireland needs to be recognised for the work it has done in protecting consumers by uncovering a huge Europe wide scam (the UK, France, Sweden, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and Poland to date) perhaps even wider. It has set the standard others across Europe will have to follow from now on; a growing list of food processors and retailers say they will introduce such testing after the Food Safety Authority of Ireland's findings. The testing was done by IdentiGEN Ltd., an Irish company founded in 1996 after world class research conducted at Trinity College Dublin. It now has laboratories in the UK, US and Canada, and offers its DNA TraceBack scheme to big retailers. Nations will always dress a story from the perspective of their national vantage point -Large nations that sustain international media companies, can do harm to smaller nations as they frequently ignore relevant information out of a lack of insight into that jurisdiction. In an ideal world, the media of the Irish Diaspora, would help counteract this by publishing relevant information and protecting Irish interests from misleading reporting abroad. If it was another jurisdiction's Food safety Authority, using standards and science developed by them, that uncovered this international scam, you can be sure we would be hearing about it.
It is highly relevant that this Europe wide scam was uncovered in Ireland, due to the DNA testing which ~I spoke of below. IC has written a number of articles on this story, yet I do not think it has written one on this highly relevant point. Why not?
The Food Safety Authority of Ireland needs to be recognised for the work it has done in protecting consumers by uncovering a huge Europe wide scam (the UK, France, Sweden, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and Poland to date) perhaps even wider. It has set the standard others across Europe will have to follow from now on; a growing list of food processors and retailers say they will introduce such testing after the Food Safety Authority of Ireland's findings. The testing was done by IdentiGEN Ltd., an Irish company founded in 1996 after world class research conducted at Trinity College Dublin. It now has laboratories in the UK, US and Canada, and offers its DNA TraceBack scheme to big retailers. Nations will always dress a story from the perspective of their national vantage point -Large nations that sustain international media companies, can do harm to smaller nations as they frequently ignore relevant information out of a lack of insight into that jurisdiction. In an ideal world, the media of the Irish Diaspora, would help counteract this by publishing relevant information and protecting Irish interests from misleading reporting abroad. If it was another jurisdiction's Food safety Authority, using standards and science developed by them, that uncovered this international scam, you can be sure we would be hearing about it.
 




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