Ikea withdraws hot dogs in Europe after horsemeat detected
U.S., Canada not affected as sausages, meatballs come from different supplier
The Associated Press
Posted: Feb 27, 2013 10:43 AM ET
Last Updated: Feb 27, 2013 5:43 PM ET
Advertising billboards for Ikea meatballs are taken down Monday from a parking at Swedish Ikea store. Swedish furniture giant Ikea was drawn into Europe's widening food labeling scandal this week as horsemeat was detected in frozen meatballs and sausages. (Jessica Gow/Associated Press)
After withdrawing meatballs from stores across Europe, home furnishings company Ikea said Wednesday its own tests confirmed "a few indications of horsemeat" and that it would also remove wiener sausages made by the same supplier.
Ikea said it would withdraw the sausages from stores in France, Britain, Spain, Ireland and Portugal. Other stores were getting sausages from other suppliers, company spokeswoman Ylva Magnusson said.
'Based on some hundred test results that we have received so far, there are a few indications of horsemeat.'—Ylva Magnusson, Ikea spokeswoman
No horsemeat had been found in the wieners, which are made of ground pork and beef, but they were removed anyway because they came from the same supplier as the meatballs, Magnusson said.
The supplier, Gunnar Dafgard AB, didn't return calls seeking comment.
The move comes two days after Czech food inspectors found traces of horsemeat in Ikea's Swedish-made meatballs, prompting the company to pull them from store shelves in 21 European countries and in Hong Kong, Thailand and the Dominican Republic.
Stores in other countries, including the U.S. and Canada, were not affected because they received meatballs from a different supplier.
Ikea said results from its own tests confirmed some meatballs didn't just contain beef and pork, despite what their labelling said.
"Based on some hundred test results that we have received so far, there are a few indications of horsemeat," Magnusson said. "Together with the Swedish supplier in question we have decided to withdraw from sales also the wiener sausages ... from that supplier."
Europe's growing horsemeat scandal
Horsemeat has recently been found mixed into beef dishes sold across Europe, including in frozen supermarket meals. It has also been found in meals served at restaurants, schools and hospitals. Authorities say the scandal is a case of fraudulent labelling but does not pose a health risk.
The French wholesaler at the epicentre of the scandal, Spanghero, announced Wednesday that it had filed for bankruptcy protection. The company denies that it intentionally mislabelled and sold horsemeat as beef, but the French government has said it should have known and temporarily forced it to shut down all production. Spanghero has slowly started to package meats again, but is not selling any to other manufacturers.
The company, which employs about 300 people, said it hoped the court filing would save its business and those jobs.
Meanwhile, food safety authorities across Europe continued to clamp down on mislabelled meat.
Latvia's food safety agency said that traces of horsemeat were found in products labelled as beef by a local meatpacker, Forevers.
The agency said 416 horses were slaughtered last year in Latvia, out of which 203 were eventually delivered to Forevers from the same Latvia-based slaughterhouse, Aibi. All the horsemeat was labeled as beef in the invoices, the agency said. It wasn't immediately clear if any of the meat was exported.
Also Wednesday, Russia's state sanitary watchdog said it detected horsemeat in sausages imported from Austria. The agency's spokesman, Alexei Alexeyenko, said in a statement carried by the ITAR-Tass news agency that the sausages were stated to only contain beef.
And in Greece, authorities said they seized a tonne of frozen meat from Romania that had been labeled as beef, after testing located traces of horse DNA — the first such discovery in the country.
Portuguese authorities said late Tuesday they had seized 79,000 kilograms of beef products containing traces of horsemeat in recent days and opened criminal proceedings against five local companies. Portugal's Food Safety Agency said it made the seizures at companies that process, package and distribute meat to large retail outlets.
The agency said in a statement on its website that it also took almost 19,000 pre-packed products from Portuguese stores after detecting horsemeat in them. They included lasagnas, hamburgers and meatballs.
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