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Malaysia says Cadbury chocolates free from pork

Cadbury chocolates sold in Malaysia have been cleared of containing pork, the country's top Islamic body said Monday in a statement that should lessen calls for a boycott of the British confectionary company after earlier tests suggested two types of chocolate bar contained pig DNA

Eileen Ng (The Jakarta Post)
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Mon, June 2, 2014 Published on Jun. 2, 2014 Published on 2014-06-02T15:21:49+07:00

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C

adbury chocolates sold in Malaysia have been cleared of containing pork, the country's top Islamic body said Monday in a statement that should lessen calls for a boycott of the British confectionary company after earlier tests suggested two types of chocolate bar contained pig DNA.

The now apparently discredited findings last month by the Ministry of Health sparked outrage among some Islamist groups in Malaysia, who called for a boycott of all Cadbury's products. Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim country, is also testing Cadbury chocolates, although the two products at issue in Malaysia are not sold there.

On Monday, the Malaysian Islamic Development Department said new tests on 11 samples of Dairy Milk Hazelnut and Dairy Milk Roast Almond bars taken from Cadbury's factory showed no traces of pork.

The department, which had suspended the "halal" certification of the two Cadbury bars, said it will review that decision after a visit to the factory for further tests on the production line to ensure the company fully complies with requirements.

The Ministry of Health, which last month said tests showed pig DNA contamination, made no immediate comment.

The department said those samples could have been contaminated as they didn't come direct from the factory.

Under Islamic Shariah law, halal products should not contain pork or alcohol. Retailers in Muslim countries, as well as consumers, are highly likely to shun any product that is subject to questions over its halal status.

Cadbury Malaysia said last week it had proactively recalled the products alleged by the Ministry of Health to be contaminated.

It insisted it had no reason to believe that there were pork-derived ingredients in the chocolates and said that it "stood by its halal certification."

Some Islamist groups, keen to be seen defending the faithful from danger, demanded a boycott and accused the company of trying to "weaken" Muslims in Malaysia. It was unclear how much Cadbury sales fell as a result of the publicity.

Roy Sparingga, who heads Indonesia's Food and Drug Monitoring Agency, said the agency on Friday took 10 different Cadbury products for lab testing. Sparingga said the agency was also checking supermarkets across Indonesia to ensure that Cadbury hazelnut and roast almond bars are not being sold.

Cadbury Indonesia said in a statement that its products have been certified halal by Islamic authorities.

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Associated Press writer Niniek Karmini in Jakarta, Indonesia contributed. (**)

 

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