New Zealand | Authorities investigating threat to poison baby formula

A Fonterra milk powder factory at Pahiatua, New Zealand

A Fonterra milk powder factory at Pahiatua, New Zealand

 

An anonymous blackmailer threatened to poison infant formula in New Zealand to protest the country’s use of poisonous baits for pest control, and sent dairy giant Fonterra packets of milk powder laced with pesticide, police said yesterday.
Prime Minister John Key said the threat was likely a hoax, and assured parents that formula was safe for babies to drink. But the announcement prompted fears of a backlash against the country’s economically crucial dairy industry.
Fonterra, the world’s largest exporter of dairy products and New Zealand’s biggest company, and farming association Federated Farmers both received anonymous letters in November, police said. The letters were accompanied by small packages of milk powder that tested positive for a concentrated form of the agricultural pesticide 1080 (ten-eighty), which is used by the country’s conservation department to control pests such as rats and possums.
The letters threatened to contaminate infant and other formula with 1080 unless New Zealand stopped using it by the end of March, New Zealand Police Deputy Commissioner Mike Clement said. New Zealand uses 80 percent of the 1080 produced worldwide, and many animal welfare advocates oppose its use, arguing it causes animals to suffer slow, painful deaths.
Since November, dozens of police have been trying without success to figure out who sent the letters, Clement said. The blackmailer had threatened to go public by the end of the month, prompting officials to make the announcement yesterday.
The nation’s Ministry for Primary Industries said it had tested over 40,000 product samples and found no evidence that any were contaminated.
“We are advised it is extremely unlikely anyone could deliberately contaminate formula during the manufacturing process and there is no evidence that this has ever occurred,” Key said. “While it is very likely this threat is a hoax, we as the government have to take it seriously and I can assure you that we are.”
Although Fonterra received one of the letters, the blackmailer did not specifically threaten the dairy company’s products, Clement said. AP

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