Pork found in UK, Norway halaal products

17/04/2012. A group calling themselves the National Coalition of Christian Groups and Individuals are complaining about religious labelling of food packaging, such as the Halaal and Kosher signs on certain packages. They will ask the Pretoria High Court to declare this unconstitutional. Picture: Thobile Mathonsi

17/04/2012. A group calling themselves the National Coalition of Christian Groups and Individuals are complaining about religious labelling of food packaging, such as the Halaal and Kosher signs on certain packages. They will ask the Pretoria High Court to declare this unconstitutional. Picture: Thobile Mathonsi

Published Mar 15, 2013

Share

OSLO, Norway - Europe's embarrassing meat saga took a troubling twist after reports emerged in Norway and Britain that meat labeled 'halaal', or fit for consumption by Muslims, was found to contain pork.

Norway's food inspectorate said Friday it has found pork in kebab meat and pizza toppings that were labeled halaal, while a British meat company apologized after halaal chicken sausages supplied to at least one school were found to contain pork.

Muslims are forbidden to eat pork under Islamic law.

Ragnhild Arnesen, spokeswoman for the Norwegian Food Safety Authority, said the agency was testing food for horse meat and discovered that some products contained large amounts of pork though the labels indicated they were all-beef.

“We found the pork both in kebab meat in grocery stores and meat used in fast-food eating places,” Arnesen said.

“We consider this to be serious and have begun criminal proceedings against two producers - Kuraas, the company that sold pork as halaal meat - and another producer, Norsk Mesterkjoett, whose products were labeled 100 percent beef but contained more than 60 percent pork,” she said.

Arnesen said Kuraas AS has recalled all the fast-food meat from supermarkets and restaurants.

Kuraas AS issued an apology on its website, saying it was working with the food authority to determine how the pork ended up in the meat products.

Horse meat, which poses no health risk, has been discovered in beef dishes across Europe, evoking concern about mislabeling and disgust in places where it is not traditionally eaten. - Sapa-AP

Related Topics: