False fish sauce survey sponsored by
Ogilvy Vietnam: gov’t
A man is seen at a
traditional Vietnamese fish sauce making facility. Tuoi Tre
The
government gave an answer on Tuesday to one of the most burning questions
emanating from a report that sparked false concern over the safety of
traditional Vietnamese fish sauce: who sponsored the controversial survey?
Misleading
findings about the safety of Vietnamese fish sauce, as claimed in a report
released in mid-October by the Vietnam Standards and Consumers Association
(Vinastas) overshadowed a government meeting in Hanoi on Tuesday, with the
media demanding the state give more details about the case.
The
meeting came hot on the heels of a public apology issued by Vinastas, which was also
blasted for its lack of sincerity as the non-profit association put
responsibility for the survey on its team members instead of its leaders.
Despite
the apology, the media has continued questioning the government over what the
exact violations of Vinastas are, how they will be penalized, and whether
there was a commercial sponsor behind the controversial survey.
In
response, Minister Mai Tien Dung, chairman of the Government Office, said
Vinastas had violated the law on food safety by releasing inaccurate information,
and laws surrounding consumer protection.
“The
survey was carried out under the sponsorship of T&A Ogilvy JVC Ltd.,
contravening the rule that it be independently conducted,” Minister Dung
said.
The
Government Office chairman added that Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc has
been briefed of all violations by Vinastas.
Vinastas
has been under fire since its survey last month claimed that over two-thirds
of the 150 fish sauce samples it tested contained more than the maximum
allowable level of arsenic content per liter (1 gram).
It
was discovered later that the non-profit organization had deliberately
released its findings in a misleading way, causing unnecessary fear among
consumers.
According
to the Ministry of Health, arsenic exists in both organic and inorganic
forms, but only the latter is toxic. The arsenic in traditional fish sauce is
organic, and Vietnam’s food watchdog sets no limit on organic arsenic content
in fish sauce.
Traditional
fish sauce is made from fermented fish, and only contains the non-toxic
organic arsenic, while mass-produced sauces are made with artificial
flavoring. The Vinastas survey suggested that traditionally-made sauces were
toxic.
It
was widely believed that the association had been sponsored to conduct the
survey and released the findings in a deliberately misleading way.
T&A
Ogilvy JVC Ltd. is a venture formed in 2009, after Ogilvy & Mather, a WPP
company, acquired a majority stake in Hanoi-based T&A Communications, a
leading public relations agency in Vietnam.
The
venture formalizes a working relationship that T&A Communications has had
with the Ogilvy Public Relations Group since 2002, Ogilvy & Mather said
in a press release in July of that year.
T&A
Ogilvy is now part of the growing Ogilvy & Mather Group in Vietnam that
includes Ogilvy & Mather Advertising, Ogilvy Public Relations, Ogilvy
One, OgilvyAction and Redworks.
T&A
Communications was formed in 1996 in Hanoi and has grown to become one of the
country's leading public relations companies, with a branch office in Ho Chi
Minh City.
The
company has a client base comprised of major multinational and leading local
brands, including Amway, Boeing, Canon, Nestlé Vietnam, Standard Chartered
Bank, Temasek Holdings, Tata Steel, VietJet Air, and Yahoo!, according to
Ogilvy & Mather.
TUOI TRE
NEWS
|
Thứ Tư, 30 tháng 11, 2016
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