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  • Products Made in China That May Pose Health Risks

    Source: http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5i...GH-qAD939VCL80

    French retailer in hot seat over Chinese chairs

    By JOHN LEICESTER

    PARIS (AP) ? After tainted baby milk, now toxic chairs from China.

    Customers in France who bought Chinese-made recliners are complaining of stinging allergic rashes and infections.

    One customer, Caroline Morin, said Friday she was stunned to learn the chair she bought last December appears to have caused the skin problems she says she suffered for months.

    "You sit comfortably on something and in fact you have a bomb under your butt," she said.

    The French distributor, Conforama, warned clients in July that some of the chairs and sofas presented an allergy risk "in rare cases." It has withdrawn them from sale and now says the health problems were linked to an anti-fungal chemical in the chairs.

    The affair gained attention this week following French media reports exposing problems suffered by people who bought the chairs.

    One was Dolores Ennrich, who says that because of long-term illness she spent a lot of time sitting in the recliner she purchased in March 2007.

    She says she suffered painful eczema and skin infections on her left thigh, back and left arm that put her in a hospital for 12 days and led doctors to prescribe repeated courses of antibiotics.


    "It went away, it came back, it went away. That went on for more than a year," she told The Associated Press. "It is very painful."

    Conforama says it has severed its commercial ties with the Chinese supplier, Linkwise, and told its other suppliers to no longer use the chemical, dimethyl fumarate, to prevent mold.

    Linkwise is based in the manufacturing hub of Dongguan in southern China.

    A man who answered the phone at the company said Friday that it is working with the Chinese government's quality inspection watchdog to investigate the problem. He would not give details, his name or title.

    Floods of cheap Chinese products on world markets have also been accompanied in recent years by scares over poor quality, particularly involving food.

    The latest Chinese product crisis involves baby formula made from milk powder tainted with the industrial chemical melamine. It has been blamed for the deaths of four babies and illnesses in 6,200 others in China. Previous scandals involved contaminated seafood, toothpaste and a pet food ingredient, also tainted with melamine, blamed for the deaths of dogs and cats in the United States.

    "Chinese, it's really dangerous. There's the chairs. The milk ...," said Ennrich. "We pay less but there are consequences."

    Normally, just one sachet of the anti-mold chemical is meant to be inserted into the chairs, but some contained as many as 10, said a Conforama spokeswoman, Stephanie Mathieu.

    She said the Chinese firm told Conforama that "as it was the monsoon season they decided that they needed to put more sachets in."

    Conforama said it sold 38,000 of the Linkwise chairs and that customers have so far returned 800 of them.

    Le Parisien newspaper, which has covered the case extensively this week, said the French Finance Ministry's market regulator, which polices consumer safety, is investigating to check that everything possible was done to protect clients.

    Morin said she didn't make the connection between her skin problems and her recliner until she got a letter from Conforama in July.

    "The chair has been out of my house for a month, and I feel a bit better, but I still have problems," she said.

    A rash of cases have cropped up in Britain, too. British attorney Christian Shotton said his law firm, Russell, Jones & Walker, is representing 1,300 people who bought Linkwise recliners and sofas from British retailers and who are suing for compensation. He said there have been other cases in Sweden and Finland.

    "Some of the children, some of the babies, are covered head to toe," in burns, rashes and infections, Shotton said.

    "Some of the people sit on the sofa for 15 minutes and it looks like they have been out in the sun all day."

  • #2
    Allergic reactions to Linkwise Chinese chairs

    http://en.epochtimes.com/n2/china/sc...hina-4511.html -



    School Uniforms Contaminated with Benzidine in Southern China Epoch Times Staff Sep 20, 2008 Epoch Times Staff Sep 20, 2008 Share: Share: Facebook Digg del.icio.us StumbleUpon
    Related articles: China > Society Related articles: China> Society
    More than 10 percent of school uniforms have been found to be below the minimum health and safety standards for Guangdong Province. More than 10 percent of school uniforms have been found to be below the minimum health and safety standards for Guangdong Province.

    On Sept. On Sept. 18, the Guangdong Province Quality and Technology Supervision Bureau published the results from a school uniform quality check. 18, the Guangdong Province Quality and Technology Supervision Bureau published the results from a school uniform quality check.

    According to the report, close to 11 percent of uniforms checked were substandard. According to the report, close to 11 percent of checked uniforms were substandard.
    In 2007, a similar spot check found 48 percent of uniforms below the required standard. In 2007, a similar spot check found 48 percent of uniforms below the required standard.

    According to the Nanfang Daily, schools in the cities of Shenzhen, Shaoguan, Qingyuan, Jieyang, Dongguan, Jiangmen, Yangjiang, Zhaoqing, Meizhou, Chaozhou, and Yunfu all passed the spot check. According to the Nanfang Daily, schools in the cities of Shenzhen, Shaoguan, Qingyuan, Jieyang, Dongguan, Jiangmen, Yangjiang, Zhaoqing, Meizhou, Chaozhou, and passed all Yunfu the spot check.

    In Guangzhou, 95 percent of uniforms passed but in Zhuhai City, it was around 50 percent. In Guangzhou, 95 percent of uniforms passed but in Zhuhai City, it was around 50 percent. In Foshan, Heyuan, and Zhanjiang 68, 70, and 73 passed respectively. In Foshan, Heyuan, Zhanjiang and 68, 70, and 73 passed respectively.

    The Bureau also discovered that uniforms made by the Kunpeng Garment Company in Lianping County contained benzidine, a carcinogenic organic intermediate often used to make dyes. The Bureau also discovered that uniforms made by the Kunpeng Garment Company in Lianping County contained benzidine, and carcinogenic organic intermediate often used to make dyes.

    Wearing clothes that contain benzidine can cause nausea and vomiting, as well as more serious problems, such as liver or kidney damage. Wearing clothes that contain benzidine can cause nausea and vomiting, as well as more serious problems, such as liver or kidney damage.

    China’s clothing industry was supposed to have switched over and use more benign or less toxic intermediates in their dyes. China's clothing industry was supposed to have switched over and use more benign or less toxic intermediates in their dyes.

    A spot check aimed at 18 sets of uniforms also found that 90 percent failed the pH test, with a pH that was either too low or too high. A spot check aimed at 18 sets of uniforms also found that 90 percent failed the pH test, with a pH that was either too low or too high. Incorrect pH in clothing can lead to hypersensitivity or skin infections. Incorrect pH in clothing can lead to hypersensitivity or skin infections.
    Last edited by sharon sanders; September 27, 2008, 12:44 PM. Reason: format

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    • #3
      Re: Allergic reactions to Some Chairs and Uniforms Made in China

      Source: http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/sto...-23109,00.html

      Italy: Police bust 'toxic shoe' ring
      From correspondents in Rome

      September 27, 2008 11:24am

      ITALIAN police say they have confiscated some 1.7 million counterfeit shoes made with leather containing illegal toxins, most of them from China.

      Operation Toxic Shoes began in May and 21 Chinese and seven Italians were being prosecuted for selling counterfeit products and threatening public health, a police spokesman said.

      Shoes containing hexavalent chromium compounds, which are illegal in Italy due to their high toxicity and potentially carcinogenic effect, were seized in Tuscany, police said.

      A police unit responsible for financial crimes seized counterfeit imports which were mostly made in China but were labelled as "real leather" and "made in Italy", police said.

      More than ?20 million ($35.1m) of merchandise was seized in one of Tuscany's largest sweeps in recent years. The operation led to 45 searches including in three other Italian regions outside Tuscan

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      • #4
        Re: Products Made in China That May Pose Health Risks

        The situation with melamine in products from China thread is here:




        Please be aware that disease information can be used as an economic weapon via the media. We are taking the cautious approach and publishing information about various product contaminations that may result in possible health risks.

        From our experience with "bird flu" we know that politicians in various countries use proprietary disease information to manipulate the media. Some have also misrepresented the facts.

        Please view all disease and public health information with caution. We will continue to publish data and comments in an effort to cast light on the truth.

        Thank you to all the analysts at FT and at all the various blogs and forums.

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