Guest guest Posted May 14, 2002 Report Share Posted May 14, 2002 http://www.asahi.com/english/national/K2002051400539.html Milk substitutes cited in BSE case The Asahi Shimbun SAPPORO-The farmer who raised the Holstein that tested positive for mad cow disease over the weekend fed his livestock the same milk substitutes consumed by three other cattle infected with the brain-wasting ailment. The farmer, from Onbetsu, Hokkaido, said he used milk substitutes produced at a plant in Takasaki, Gunma Prefecture. The same plant, run by Scientific Feed Laboratory Co., made milk substitutes fed to the three cows previously confirmed to have bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), or mad cow disease. However, the farmer said he is not sure if the Holstein, born in 1996, was actually given the product. The other infected cows were also born in 1996. The farmer's comments came up during a BSE investigation conducted by the Onbetsu agricultural cooperative in Hokkaido, which sold the milk substitutes to the farmer. In September, when the first BSE case was reported, the Hokkaido government asked all farmers about the conditions surrounding their livestock. At that time, the Onbetsu farmer said no meat and bone meal (MBM)-the suspected cause of mad cow disease-was being used at his farm. The milk substitutes in question are solid feed consisting of artificial powdered skim milk, cattle fat, sugar and other ingredients. Government experts say these products could be another source of BSE because infected cows have been found in European countries that have banned MBM. Specialists suspect the culprit is tallow because fat for animal feed usually comes from livestock bones and other parts, and the milk substitutes are manufactured at the same plant where MBM is produced. Fat does not contain the abnormal prions that cause BSE, leading specialists to speculate that protein remains from MBM manufacturing process were mixed into the fat used to make milk substitutes. According to an investigation by the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, the Takasaki plant has been using cattle fat imported from the Netherlands, a nation that has experienced an outbreak of BSE. The ministry in March said it cannot rule out the possibility that the Dutch fat was the source of BSE in Japan. (05/14) LAUNCH - Your Music Experience http://launch. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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