Does
nobody control wine quality?
Several recent cases of alcohol poisoning,
many resulting in deaths, have sounded the alarm about the state's lax
management of alcohol and alcohol abuse among Vietnamese.
On the market today are hundreds of alcohol products
with different labels. There are also alcohol products without labels, which
are called “ruou que” (rural wine) or “quoc lui” (national rice wine). Wine
of unknown origin is sold everywhere and is almost totally uncontrolled.
Where is the law?
A victim of alcohol poisoning at the Hanoi-based
The
And in the
"The local authorities are not in charge of wine
quality so we can only remind the families to protect their traditional wine
brand,” Ton maintains.
According to the Vietnam Craft Villages’ Association,
there are about 40-50 traditional wine villages throughout the country. Most
of wine producers in these villages have not registered for business or
product quality.
Statistics from the Vietnam Association for
Anti-counterfeiting Goods and Brand Protection indicate that about 800
million liters of alcohol are sold in the market annually, in which the wine
produced by registered firms accounts for only 20 percent. The rest is
produced by households, out of the oversight of any quality control
authority.
To control the origin and quality of wine, particularly
wine processed by households, the Government issued a decree on wine
production and trading which took effect on the first day of 2013. Under the
new regulations, all facilities producing wine for business purposes must
register and meet legal requirements on environmental protection, quality,
food safety and labeling.
However, after more than a year since the decree took
effect, nearly 100 percent of the household-scale wine production businesses
are still out of control.
Why?
Mr. Tran Quang Trung, Director of the Food Safety
Department of the Ministry of Health, complains that it is very difficult to
manage traditional wine products.
The decree on alcohol management, despite its good
intentions, does not work in reality. Many moonshiners are not even aware of
the new regulations, while enforcement agencies feel powerless to do much.
And according to a number of enterprises in the liquor
business, even for registered producers, the quality of wine products is
poorly controlled. As a rule, wine producers must verify their own product
quality and take responsibility for it. However, many disregard this rule,
either failing to test product quality altogether, or only checking a small
portion of the product.
In late 2013, six people died after drinking liquor
produced by a Hanoi-based company. The liquor is one of the company’s three
products that were recalled after tests showed the methanol levels of the
liquors to be 2,000 times higher than the legal level. The incident roused the
public and once again the question about state management over this product
was raised.
According to current regulations, alcohol-based
products are managed by four agencies: business licenses are granted by the
Department of Planning and Investment; liquor manufacturing licenses are
issued by the Department of Industry and Trade; trademarks are licensed by
the Department of Science and Technology; and food safety certificates and
certification of product standards for alcohol products high in methanol are granted
by the Department of Health.
More alcohol-related mental patients
Dr. La Duc Cuong, Director of Central Mental Hospital
I, says the hospital has seen dozens of people with alcohol-related mental
disorders. Alcohol is responsible for many types of mental disorders, says
Cuong. Many alcoholics develop paranoia, convincing themselves that others
are plotting to harm them. Consequently, they have very dangerous behavior.
According to research of
NLD
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Thứ Năm, 1 tháng 5, 2014
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