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Poison blanket recall
#1
AP - Chinese-made blankets found to contain high levels of formaldehyde have been recalled across Australia and New Zealand, the distributor said today, amid rising global concerns about the safety of Chinese products.

The voluntary recall by Australian-based Charles Parsons came two days after the New Zealand government launched an urgent investigation after scientists found dangerous levels of formaldehyde in woolen and cotton clothes made in China.

A range of Chinese exports - from pet food ingredients to toothpaste - have come under international scrutiny in recent months.

Toy company Mattel Inc recently issued two recalls of Chinese-made toys, including some distributed in Australia, due to lead-tainted paint and tiny magnets that could be swallowed by children.

Formaldehyde - a chemical preservative that gives a permanent press effect to clothes and is also used as an embalming fluid - can cause problems ranging from skin rashes to cancer.

Charles Parsons decline to release the total number of blankets involved, but spokesman Mark Bilton said "there's a lot" in Australia and about 800 in New Zealand.

Tests had shown the formaldehyde level in the "Superlux" label blankets was "above the European and US standards. There are no standards in Australia and New Zealand so it's a voluntary recall," he said.

Independent tests had revealed the chemical's content was "less" that 1500 parts per million - the maximum level permitted in Germany - but "we've decided not to get into those details," Bilton said.

An official at China's General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine, a quality watchdog, said the case was under investigation.

Meanwhile, New Zealand government research agency AgResearch said it was swamped by clothing companies wanting tests on Chinese imports.

Scientists testing clothes for TV3's "Target" consumer watchdog program discovered formaldehyde concentrations up to 900 times above the safe level.

Many companies had complained that they had no information about what constitutes safe levels of formaldehyde, said Lorraine Greer, AgResearch's textiles division testing laboratory manager.

The New Zealand Ministry of Consumer Affairs today said it would start a program to test for formaldehyde in clothes next week as part of its probe, while acknowledging the country had no standard for formaldehyde levels in textiles - a concern of retailers.

At least 100 items of children's and adults' clothing and babywear imported from a range of countries would be included in the testing, Ministry General Manager Liz MacPherson said.

"As part of the investigation, New Zealand will look at standards and testing regimes overseas," she said.

"Neither New Zealand or Australia currently has a standard for formaldehyde levels in textiles."

The blanket recall comes after New Zealand cut-price retailer The Warehouse issued a recall of children's pajamas made in China last weekend after two children were burned when their flannelette pajamas caught fire.

http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/pois...39151.html
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#2
This is getting absolutely ridiculous.
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#3
You have that right!  All of a sudden goods from China are not up to par?  I don't think so!
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#4
 I guess the us is trying to blackmail china into doing what ever it is that we want or dont want them to do????
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#5
I have not heard of this recall, but I think it is time all the shortcuts were exposed, Australian workers lost their jobs in a big way to the Chinese taking over the textile industry about 10 years ago.
It may be the Chinese who are being exposed currently, but next it will be the big guns who gave these orders, the greedy business people who care more about money than people and forgot to think about the consumer in their plans. Any plan that is constructed from greed and bad intent will eventually fall like a house of cards, universal law has no ‘what ifs’.
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#6
Polly,

 What are your thoughts on the current blitz of recalls of products from China?
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#7
MN, that it really has nothing to do with product safety or concern for human health and that who is behind it is not obvious.  It's an effective psychological and economic warfare strategy.
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#8
William Wrote: I guess the us is trying to blackmail china into doing what ever it is that we want or dont want them to do????
It’s Rothschild attacking Windsor. China is controlled by Windsor. Chinese products have always had problems but they are just now being exposed.
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#9
Humor: I say, let them all continue to expose each other's crooked ways.  :-)
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