Guest guest Posted May 26, 2001 Report Share Posted May 26, 2001 Hi, I heard an interview with an Indian hindu representative on the radio this morning concerning a law suit about McDonalds using animal products in cooking chips. As a vegetarian, I too feel annoyed that many shops in Australia sell hot chips cooked in vegetable oil but that have been pre-processed using animal fat. Here are two articles about the McDonalds protests (India and USA) Marguerite ## McDonald's raided in Hindu protest Items compiled from Tribune news services http://chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/article/0,2669,SAV-0105060383,FF. html May 6, 2001 NEW DELHI, INDIA -- Hindu activists charged into a McDonald's restaurant in a Bombay suburb, smashing furniture and lights to protest the use of beef flavoring in the chain's French fries in the United States. Restaurant customers fled as members of the Bajrang Dal raided the restaurant Friday in Thane, but there were no reports of injuries, police said. In southern Bombay, another McDonald's was surrounded by demonstrators from the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party who shouted slogans and smeared cow dung. McDonald's says it does not use any animal extracts in its French fries in India, where the cow is considered sacred by most Hindus. But it confirmed it uses some beef flavoring, though not beef fat, in its American fries. The protests were touched off by front-page newspaper reports about a lawsuit filed in Seattle on Tuesday. An Indian-American lawyer accused McDonald's of using beef fat in the preparation of French fries more than a decade after it said it would cook its fries in vegetable oil. Most of India's Hindus are vegetarians. ************************************* ##The chips are down at McDonald's http://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/0,,3-2001171350,00.html BY JAMES BONE Hindus are outraged that fries were meat flavoured McDONALD’S, the fast food giant facing a lawsuit from outraged Hindus, has apologised to all religious and secular vegetarians for failing to make clear that beef flavouring is added to its chips in America. When a Seattle lawyer representing two Hindus and one non-Hindu vegetarian who ate McDonald’s “French fries” launched the action earlier this month, it provoked uproar in India where Hindus revere the cow as sacred. Harish Bharti, who is handling the case without pay, said that one million Hindus and 15 million vegetarians should get damages for “emotional distress” for eating beef-tainted chips in the United States. “This is a pure fight for dharma, which means right,” Mr Bharti said. “That is what it’s all about: to save a culture and to save a religion from these people.” McDonald’s, which operates 28,000 restaurants in 120 countries, announced in 1990 that it was switching from beef tallow to “100 per cent vegetable oil” for frying chips at its outlets in the United States. Vegetarian customers were appalled to learn that McDonald’s American chips still contained beef flavouring added during processing. The company says that no beef or pork flavouring is used in potatoes sold in Britain or India or in predominantly Muslim countries in Southeast Asia, the Middle East and Africa where large numbers of people are vegetarian for religious reasons. “The situation is different in the United Kingdom,” Amanda Pierce, a company spokesman, said. “In the United Kingdom we do not add any flavourings to our French fries at any stage of the process. They are 100 per cent potato cooked in 100 per cent vegetable oil.” The company says that the much-publicised change to vegetable oil was “for nutritional reasons, to offer customers a cholesterol-free menu item” and insists that it complied with US regulations when it described the beef additive as “natural flavour”. But many American Hindus who had eaten what they thought were beef-free chips were shocked to read an article in the India West newspaper last month headlined: “Where’s the beef? It’s in your French fries”. The newspaper learnt about the secret ingredient from Hitesh Shah, a Los Angeles software engineer and strict vegetarian who had sent an e-mail inquiry to McDonald’s. The reply from a customer service representative said that the company used “a minuscule amount of beef flavouring as an ingredient in the raw product”. In India restaurant windows were smashed and cow dung smeared on statues of Ronald McDonald. Hindu nationalists called for the fast-food chain to be expelled. Lige Weill, executive director of the Vegetarian Awareness Network, said his group had tried to alert the media to the beef content of McDonald’s chips in 1997 after the company admitted that its “natural flavour” came from an “animal source”. It was he who put Mr Bharti in touch with the Vegetarian Legal Action Network formed by students at George Washington University, which helped him to prepare the lawsuit. McDonald’s, while insisting that it never claimed that the chips served in its American restaurants were vegetarian, says in a statement on its website: “Because it is our policy to communicate to customers, we regret if customers felt that the information we provided was not complete enough to meet their needs. If there was confusion, we apologise.” Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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