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Fonterra boss apologises for milk scare, denies cover-up

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Fonterra boss apologises for milk scare, denies cover-up

New Zealand dairy giant Fonterra apologised on Monday for a botulism scare that saw product recalls in China but denied accusations by Prime Minister John Key that it delayed releasing information.

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“We deeply apologise to the people who have been affected,” CEO Theo Spierings told a news conference in China, the world’s biggest market for baby formula.

But he insisted that the company had informed customers and the authorities within 24 hours of confirming the contamination problem.

Dairy product sales to China are a significant contributor to the New Zealand economy – it is the world’s largest dairy exporter with the sector accounting for 25 per cent of total exports – and the scare is a blow to its reputation.

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It has long promoted itself as a supplier of “clean, green” dairy products, particularly in the vital Chinese infant formula market, where consumers distrust domestically-made products after a series of food safety scandals.

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