Latest News:  

English>>China Society

Toxic toys still made a year after exposé

By Chen Tian (Globaltimes.cn)

10:47, March 05, 2013

Local authorities in Shantou, Guangdong Province, have failed to stop local toy manufacturers from using toxic materials in their products, a full year after an exposé by China Central Television (CCTV) sparked a public outcry.

After returning to Shantou, CCTV discovered that toxic materials were still being used by many of the city's toy manufacturers.

According to a CCTV report Monday, the city had removed two local industry and commerce officials in Shantou's Chenghai district following the renewed scandal.

In March 2012, CCTV reported that Shantou's toy manufacturing industry was habitually using toxic materials to make its products. After a public outcry, the city's deputy mayor apologized, and vowed to make fundamental quality improvements in the industry.

However, any improvement sparked by the television report was short-lived. A revisit from CCTV reporters found that local processing workshops are still providing toxic materials, such as medical waste made from plastics, to toy manufacturers.

"The officials are busy having meetings to find a way to solve the toxic toy problem," an administrative officer from Shantou government, who would not give his name, told the Global Times.

At the processing workshops, plastic materials and used medical devices, which are often found in garbage cans, are simply smashed, rinsed and dried, and then sold to toy producers. Sometimes the workshops even added ground-up stone in the materials to make it heavier, with the hope of making more money, CCTV reported Sunday.

Almost none of the toy products have ever been certified by China's quality control and inspection authorities, the investigation revealed.

Toy retailers at a Chenghai district plastics city, a marketplace for the city's retailers, told CCTV that quality certification can be easily printed on the toys without any inspection by governmental supervisory body.

Chenghai district government's website published a news story Monday saying that Shantou has started a "blanket investigation" into the matter and was determined to eliminate toxic toys.

"We will take immediate and effective actions to solve the problem," Shantou's deputy mayor, Lin Yimin, was quoted as saying in the Chenghai Daily story.

A senior executive at a Chenghai-based toymaker, Huawei Technology Co Ltd, said in an e-mail to the Global Times that the local government has loose inspection efforts and some toymakers have a poor sense of integrity.

"It (Chenghai district government) should establish a long-term supervisory system, and the inspection measures have to be effectively enforced," Qiu Liang, vice general manager of the toy producer, wrote in the note.

"Once a problem is found, the companies involved must be heavily punished," Qiu wrote.

The toy manufacturing industry drives Chenghai's economic growth and is a major part of Shantou's economy. According to the Shantou Inspection and Quarantine Bureau, Shantou's 2012 toy exports reached $1.6 billion, a 12.7-percent increase from the previous year. The biggest foreign buyers are from Hong Kong and Southeast Asian countries.

We Recommend:

Bikini-clad models sparked a debate on racism

Young candidates for Acting Department of BFA

BFA releases list of re-examination

Alarming water pollution in China

Chilly run gets blood pumping

Photo story:Arriving in Beijing

China's 'leftover women' arouses debate in West

Top 10 fascinating natural phenomena in the world

Street propaganda on environmental protection

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:WangXin、Chen Lidan)

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. Chinese navy's Su-30MKK2 fighters

  2. "Tonglin" guided missile frigate in firing

  3. Pro, anti-Hugo Chavez demonstrators protest

  4. Quake hits China's Yunnan, 30 injured

  5. Beautiful journalist reporting CPPCC

  6. Two sessions: Journalists on mission

  7. Happy Boy Jaki Tan Jiexi

  8. Luoyang: Resting place of tranquility

  9. China's richest man sets his sights on foreign projects

  10. China's jumbo jet C919 expected to fly 2014

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Spoiled brats spring from pampering parents
  2. A smile can succeed where a scowl fails
  3. Reducing income inequality an urgent task
  4. Why media turns attention to 'two sessions'
  5. New glories for China in striving for nat'l renewal
  6. Home is where the heart is
  7. Are US, N. Korea playing 'basketball diplomacy'?
  8. Who will attend China's upcoming 'two sessions'?
  9. CPC adopts list of state leadership candidates
  10. Quality vocational education

What’s happening in China

Thousands of policemen hunting car, baby stealer in Changchun | Update: Stolen car found, baby still missing

  1. Regional efforts may not fix air pollution
  2. Weibo helps flood hero find job
  3. 1 in 50 Shanghai women has cancer
  4. HIV carrier sues hospital for refusing surgery
  5. Abducted boy reunited with family