Cancer drug found in UK horse meat claims Yorkshire MP

A DRUG with the potential to cause cancer in humans might have entered the food chain through horse meat slaughtered in UK abattoirs, a Yorkshire MP has claimed.

Shadow environment secretary Mary Creagh told the Commons she had evidence that “several” horses slaughtered in the UK last year tested positive for the carcinogen phenylbutazone.

Agriculture minister David Heath told the Commons the Food Standards Agency checks all meat to ensure it is fit for human consumption.

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“Where positive results of phenylbutazone are found the FSA investigates and takes follow-up action to trace the meat,” he told MPs.

Ms Creagh, the Labour MP for Wakefield, told the minister: “I am in receipt of evidence showing that several horses slaughtered in UK abattoirs last year tested positive for phenylbutazone, or bute, a drug which causes cancer in humans and is banned from the human food chain.

“It is possible that those animals entered the human food chain.”

She asked if Mr Heath was aware of the cases and the minister told her: “The Food Standards Agency carry out checks in slaughterhouses to ensure that equine animals presented for slaughter are fit for human consumption in the same way as they do for cattle, sheep and other animals.

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“In addition, the FSA carry out subsequent testing for phenylbutazone and other veterinary medicines in meat from horses slaughtered in this country.

“Where positive results for phenylbutazone are found, the FSA investigates and takes follow-up action to trace the meat.”

Ms Creagh questioned whether that meant Mr Heath was aware of the issue.

“I’m astonished that you have not raised this and I think the public have a right to know,” she said.

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Ms Creagh said it was a “very serious development” and demanded action to ensure that “illegal and carcinogenic horse meat stops entering the human food chain”.

The claim that bute could have entered the food chain follows the separate revelation that burgers sold by Tesco and other supermarkets contained traces of horse meat.

Ms Creagh called on the Government to reverse a “reckless” decision to scrap the National Equine Database (NED).

Mr Heath said: “There is no difficulty in tracing the use of a horse passport. To suggest the National Equine Database was required to do that is simply erroneous.”

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Phenylbutazone is an anti-inflammatory drug which is regularly given to horses to treat lameness, pain and fever.

It is banned from entering the human food chain in the EU and horses that have been treated with it should have the information recorded on their passport.

But Labour claim the issuing of horse passports in the UK is fragmented with 75 approved issuing organisations in the UK and now no national database to track the information.