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FOOD HYGIENE CONTROL LAW AMENDED


Patrick Wong

Amendments to the Food Hygiene Control Law were promulgated on 9 February 2000. The main changes are as follows:

  • Food hygiene standards are expanded to cover food hygiene, safety and quality standards. A provision is added that manufacturers shall not manufacture, process, blend, package, trans-port, store, sell, import, export, offer as gifts or publicly display foods or food additives not previously used as foods and not shown to be harmless to human health.


  • In the interests of food safety, the central regulatory authority (i.e. the DOH) may des-ignate food products, food additives, food-use cleansing agents, food utensils, food contain-ers and food packaging as being subject to inspection and registration. Items so desig-nated may not be manufactured, processed, blended, repackaged, imported or exported without inspection and registration, and the issuance of a permit, by the central regulatory authority.


  • Product labeling requirements: As well as the name and address of the manufacturer, the manufacturer's telephone number must now also be displayed; food products must be marked with expiry date; and on products so designated by the central regulatory authority, the names and content of nutrients must be prominently displayed in Chinese and com-monly used symbols.


  • To deter illegal advertising, a media business accepting an advertisement for publication or broadcast must retain a record of the adver-tiser's name, address, telephone number and identity card number or business registration number for a period of two months following publication or broadcast of the advertisement, and may not evade, obstruct or refuse a re-quest made by a competent authority to pro-duce such information.


  • It is explicitly provided that foodstuff manu-facturers must employ good food hygiene practices, and that types of foodstuff business designated by the central regulatory authority, such as food additive plants, must also con-form to the requirements of food safety control systems defined by that authority.


  • Foodstuff businesses designated by the central regulatory authority must obtain product li-ability insurance in respect of their products, in order to protect consumers' interests and to spread such businesses' risk and financial burden.


  • It is explicitly provided that foodstuff busi-nesses have a duty to collect and destroy products subject to confiscation. The levels of fines and administrative fines are increased, and where companies commit repeated viola-tions within certain time periods, their busi-ness or manufacturing licenses may be re-voked. Criminal penalties are also increased, and juristic persons are made liable to fines and to penalties for negligence.
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