Sales of Vietnamese goods, agricultural products affected by
rumors
False, unproven information posted on
social networking sites have unwittingly affected farmers and producers.
The clip posted by
a Facebooker on July 31.
On July 31, a person posted on his personal Facebook a
video clip, with the aim of giving a warning to consumers to not buy and eat
a new species of tiny mango sold in Vietnam recently.
According to the video, the man cut the mango to take
the seed inside. But when the mango was halved, it did not have a seed but a
layer of white plastic.
In the clip, the man chopped the mango while saying
that the mango was fake because “the seed was plastic made from oil or a kind
of chemical," the man said.
This video clip was watched by 2.2 million people and
received a huge number of comments from Internet users.
Mr. Ma Quang Trung, Director of the Horticulture
Department of the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, said that
the mango variety in the clip originated from China and it has been planted
in Vietnam. The information in the clip is completely unfounded.
However, since the rumor that Chinese mangos were made
of nylon, the sales of mango have dropped sharply at many fruit stalls in HCM
City.
Some Saigon fruit traders paid for the test to prove
that the bio-film surrounding the mango seed is safe.
Carcinogenic grapefruit?
Grapefruit growers cannot forget the incident that
occurred in mid-July 2007. At that time, some foreign news agencies such as
the BBC and Daily Mail (UK) released information that women who eat a lot of
grapefruit would be in high risk of getting breast cancer. The information
was based on survey results of over 50,000 women by two universities of
Southern California and Hawaii (USA). Women who eat 1/4 of a grapefruit or
more every day will increase the risk of breast cancer by up to 30%.
Some local newspapers quoted the source and caused
harmful confusion. Although many conferences were held and prestigious
scientists of Vietnam reassure the public and introduced evidence that
Vietnamese grapefruit was unrelated, the information caused severe psychological
impact on consumers and serious damage to grapefruit growers.
Within a month, the price of pomelo in the Mekong Delta
dropped from VND8,000-VND10,000 per kilo to VND1,000 per kilo. Many people
had to cut down pomelo trees.
Sweet potatoes turn green, suspected of contaminated by
Agent Orange
On January 11th 2016, the Agri-Food Agency of Singapore
(VAV) dismissed information by Today Online (Singapore) that Vietnamese sweet
potatoes changed to green color because of contamination with Agent Orange
from the soil.
That false information came from a Singaporean
Facebooker, who wrote on her page on January 4 that her sister bought
Vietnamese sweet potatoes. After the sweet potatoes were boiled and stored in
the refrigerator overnight, the sweet potatoes turned green. She said she
consulted a doctor, who said the sweet potatoes had been perhaps planted on
the soil affected with “Agent Orange".
The VAV confirmed that this person had no knowledge of
the sweet potatoes while ensuring that Agent Orange was not the cause.
The agency stated that all products imported into
Singapore, including sweet potatoes from Vietnam, are regularly checked for
chemical components.
The Vietnamese Embassy in Singapore quickly coordinated
with the local authorities to clarify and make correction to the false
information.
Mangos packed with “strange, toxic cover”
In April 2016, some newspapers, especially online ones,
and information websites simultaneously reported mangos wrapped with
"strange bags", suspected of containing toxic chemicals in the
Mekong Delta, particularly the provinces of Dong Thap and Tien Giang.
Shortly after the information was released, the price
of mangos in the Mekong Delta dropped immediately from about VND30,000 per
kilo to only VND15,000 per kilo.
However, when the authorities took the sample of
"strange bags" for testing, they did not discover any harmful
substances in the bags.
But when the information was corrected, farmers in the
Mekong Delta had heavy losses.
Rumors kill sausage producer
On April 22, 2016 Hanoi Market Management Team
announced the test of samples of 2.2 tons of sausage produced by a local meat
processer named Vietfoods, based in the southern province of Binh Duong. The
test showed that the sausage samples contained sodium nitrate-251 with
content from 55 to 100 mg per kilo.
This unit immediately provided information to the
media, saying that the sausage contained carcinogenic substances, which
caused a boycott of this product on the market.
This not only hit Vietfoods but also other sausage
makers in the country.
On May 23rd, the Health Ministry officially stated that
the content of sodium nitrate found in Vietfoods sausages was about 55mg per
kilo, completely safe in accordance with international practices adopted in
the US, New Zealand, Singapore, Malaysia ...
Vietfood has been pushed to the brink of bankruptcy.
After more than a month in custody, mostly 2.2 tons of Vietfood sausages
seized by the Hanoi Market Management Team are nearly expired. Their
production was delayed and workers lost their jobs.
Vietfoods production has not resumed completely.
According to this company, estimated damages are up to VND10 billion (nearly
$500,000).
Khuyen Bui, VNN
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Thứ Bảy, 13 tháng 8, 2016
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