Wal-Mart Stores Inc's British supermarket arm, Asda, said on Thursday it had discovered horse DNA in its beef bolognese sauce and was withdrawing that product and three others from its stores.
"We
have a preliminary test result that suggests the presence of horse DNA
in our 500g Beef Bolognese sauce. As you'd expect, we have withdrawn
this product from our shelves," Asda spokeswoman Jo Newbould said. Asda
has about 550 shops across the UK.
Last
month, Asda withdrew four burger products after they were found to
contain trace levels of horse DNA. The burgers were supplied by
Silvercrest, which had also sold Tesco and other grocers beef burgers
containing horse meat.
Separately on Thursday,
Irish supplier Rangeland Foods said it was withdrawing its frozen
burger products after discovering that some contained 5 percent to 30
percent horse meat. Rangeland supplies frozen burgers to restaurants,
pubs, caterers and fast food chain Supermac's.
Britain's Food Standards Agency
(FSA) said on Thursday that six horses slaughtered in the UK that
tested positive for the drug phenylbutazone were exported to France and
may have entered the human food chain.
The drug
known as bute is a common anti-inflammatory painkiller for sporting
horses, but it is banned for animals intended for eventual human
consumption because of concerns that it poses a health risk to humans.
Buy local, fresh, organic produce. Boycott supermarkets. They make you ill!
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