Police arrest 21 in France over horse meat fraud ring

About 200 horses unfit for human consumption slaughtered for meat by an organised ring, says prosecutor

Marseille state prosecutor Brice Robin (right) and Lieut-Col Patrick Bourguignon of the National Gendarmerie at a press conference yesterday. Photograph: Claude Paris/AP
Marseille state prosecutor Brice Robin (right) and Lieut-Col Patrick Bourguignon of the National Gendarmerie at a press conference yesterday. Photograph: Claude Paris/AP

Police arrested 21 people in raids on the horse meat industry across southern France yesterday on suspicion that horses used to develop medicines were sold fraudulently for food, police and industry officials said.

Marseille public prosecutor Brice Robin said about 200 horses unfit for human consumption had been given false veterinary certificates and slaughtered for meat by an organised ring, based in the southern town of Narbonne, involving cattle traders, vets and butchers.

“There is absolutely no evidence that these animals were toxic or posed a threat to public health,” he told a news conference.


Incubate antibodies
A spokesman for pharmaceutical company Sanofi said some of the horses had been used to incubate antibodies to manufacture serums for everything from rabies to snake bites, and while in good health were certified as unfit for human consumption.

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Spokesman Alain Bernal of the Sanofi Pasteur vaccine division said the firm was co-operating with investigators but did not know how long the fraud had been going on.

“Horses are a factory of antibodies,” he said.

The horses were sold to traders suspected of falsifying veterinary documents or using veterinarian accomplices to issue false certificates so they could be used in the food chain.

A statement from the paramilitary gendarmerie said about 100 officers along with inspectors from the national veterinary brigade took part in dawn raids in 11 districts.

Checks were also carried out in Spain in the region of Girona because some of the suspect meat was exported, the prosecutor said.

Consumer affairs minister Benoit Hamon said the operation stemmed from stepped-up monitoring of the industry after a French meat processing firm was at the centre of a Europe-wide scandal earlier this year over mislabelled frozen meals containing horse meat instead of beef.

The scandal, which broke in January when horse DNA was found in frozen burgers sold in Irish and British supermarkets, involved traders and abattoirs from Romania to the Netherlands.

The head of the national horse meat butchers' association, Eric Vigoureux, said the whole industry should not be held responsible for the behaviour of a few rogue traders. – (Reuters)