A
small vendor who sells soy milk at the Da Lat night market in
Owners of unregistered and family businesses operating in
Vietnam’s food industry will have to obtain a medical check-up certificate,
among many other papers, to be eligible to run their business if a draft
circular on strengthening food safety regulations is passed.
The provisional document, recently issued by the Vietnamese
Ministry of Industry and Trade, requires that such entities be committed to
ensuring food safety when offering their services.
The subjects of such rules could be a woman selling banh mi(Vietnamese bread) on the street, an eatery
selling pho, a sidewalk café, a candy and cake store, or
shops selling beer or homemade alcoholic drinks.
Non-registered and mom-and-pop businesses are those that do
not have to be legally registered as a company.
Owners of such businesses have to obtain a “having knowledge
of food safety” certificate, and undergo a health check to get a medical
check-up record, according to the draft circular, prepared by the ministry’s
science and technology agency.
The employees of such businesses would also be required to
obtain health check certificates.
Business owners must also sign a written commitment to
ensuring food safety at their facilities and this paper has to be renewed at
least once a year, according to the draft circular.
While enterprises with business licenses are required to
strictly follow many rules and regulations on food safety, how non-registered
businesses ensure the safety of their products should also be put under
management, said Nguyen Phu Cuong, head of the agency behind the document.
“As the draft circular may affect a number of businesses once
approved, the Ministry of Industry and Trade is collecting feedback from
members of the public before putting it into effect,” Cuong added.
Ngo Thi Phuong, who makes and sells uncooked Vietnamese
noodles in
Phuong currently has to obtain a document certifying that she
“has knowledge of food safety” as required by the Ministry of Health and is
thus confused whether the two papers are different or similar.
“I hope that all requirements and conditions to follow the new
rules will be made clear to the public,” she said. “The ministry should make
sure that people will not ‘buy’ such certificates with cash.”
A former leader of the Hanoi Department of Industry and Trade
said while it is necessary to ensure food safety at unregistered and family
businesses, there are many details that lack feasibility in the draft
circular.
“The document includes some management measures that lack
effectiveness and can be easily dodged by businesses,” he said.
TUOI TRE NEWS
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Thứ Năm, 3 tháng 9, 2015
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