China's milk victims complain of intimidation

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Posted on 17th March 2009 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 3/17/2009

By ANITA CHANG
Associated Press Writer

BEIJING (AP) — Families whose children fell ill from tainted milk have come under pressure to drop compensation lawsuits, victims’ advocates said Tuesday, showing the government’s lingering uneasiness over one of China’s worst contamination scandals.

Local officials were calling and visiting at least a half-dozen families, urging them to drop their cases against the dairies and accept a government-sanctioned compensation plan giving 2,000 yuan ($290) to most victims, said Zhao Lianhai, the father of a child sickened by the milk.

At least one family has decided to back out of their lawsuit, said Zhao, who has rallied other families through a Web site he created.

“One parent told me, ‘I’m more than 30 years old but I’ve never before seen the county and village officials. Everyone in the family is really scared,’” said Lu Jun, an AIDS activist who has been working with families of tainted milk victims in central China’s Henan province.

Infant formula contaminated with the industrial chemical melamine was blamed for killing at least six babies and sickening nearly 300,000 across China in the scandal that began in September.

Unscrupulous middlemen are accused of adding melamine, which is high in nitrogen, to watered-down milk to fool quality tests for protein content. When ingested, melamine can cause kidney stones and kidney failure.

The scandal rocked the country, culminating in a law enacted in recent weeks that consolidates hundreds of disparate regulations covering the country’s 500,000 food processing companies.

The accusations that local officials are trying to intimidate victim’s families come despite this month’s announcement by the executive vice president of China’s highest court, Shen Deyong, that parents who rejected the government’s compensation plan were welcome to file lawsuits against the dairies.

It was not clear why local officials would try to stop the families after Shen’s announcement. But different levels of government in China often disagree on how to handle matters, and local officials may see lawsuits as a threat to their authority with the potential to upset stability in their community.

More than 600 families have demanded higher compensation than the government plan offers — one-time payouts using money from dairies named in the scandal. Families that take the money can’t sue for more unless they can prove they were forced to agree to the compensation plan, lawyers have said.

Wang Zhenping, whose 1 1/2-year-old son became ill after drinking contaminated infant formula, said he has received four phone calls from health bureau officials in Henan’s Zhoukou city in the last two weeks. They also have visited his mother’s house twice.

“The last time they called me, I told them to call my lawyer,” he said, planning to continue his legal fight against Sanlu, the dairy at the center of the crisis.

Phones at the Zhoukou city health bureau rang unanswered Tuesday.

Lawyers representing the victims’ families have also run into obstacles in recent days.

Li Jinglin, an attorney who was representing parents of children sickened by Shengyuan brand infant formula, said the Beijing city justice bureau called his law firm last Friday and told his superiors he should not be working on the case. Li said he withdrew from the case but hoped another lawyer could take his spot.

A coalition of lawyers working to sue the 22 dairies named in the scandal is focused primarily on getting at least one case involving the key dairy Sanlu to be accepted by a court in the northern city of Shijiazhuang.

“We just want the courts to accept at least one case as an example,” lawyer Lin Zheng said.

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Associated Press researcher Xi Yue in Beijing contributed to this report.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
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New Zealand dairy accepts milk scandal verdicts

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Posted on 24th January 2009 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 1/24/2009

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — New Zealand dairy Fonterra said Saturday it accepted a Chinese court’s conviction of 21 people blamed in a deadly contaminated milk scandal, but that it does not condone the death sentences handed to two of them.

Fonterra Group — which had owned 43 percent of China’s Sanlu Group at the center of the scandal — was responsible for alerting Chinese authorities in August that milk had been contaminated with the industrial chemical melamine. By December, Fonterra had written off its $200 million investment in the Chinese dairy group.

On Friday, a Chinese court sentenced to death cattle farmer Zhang Yujun and milk trader Geng Jinping for their parts in the scandal that killed at least six babies and left nearly 300,000 other children sickened. Melamine was added to watered down milk to make it appear to have a higher protein content.

A third man, Gao Junjie, was given a death sentence for endangering public safety, but it was suspended for two years, and may be commuted to life in prison.

The former Sanlu chairwoman, Tian Wenhua, was fined 24.7 million yuan ($2.9 million) and will spend the rest of her life behind bars.

“We accept the court’s findings but Fonterra supports the New Zealand Government’s position on the death penalty,” Fonterra Chief Executive Andrew Ferrier said Saturday. “Fonterra deeply regrets the harm and pain this tragedy has caused so many Chinese families.”

Prime Minister John Key said Friday that New Zealand “does not condone the death sentence, but we respect (China’s) right to take a very serious attitude to what was an extremely serious scandal.”

Sanlu has gone into receivership and the receiver has six months to sell the company’s assets.

Shijiazhuang-based Sanlu Group Co. in Hebei province was the first Chinese milk company to confirm melamine contamination in its infant milk formula products.

More than 30 Chinese dairy companies have since been implicated in the tainted milk scandal.

Fonterra, which controls more than 95 percent of New Zealand’s milk supply, is the country’s largest multinational business, its second-biggest foreign currency earner and accounts for more than 24 percent of the nation’s exports.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
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