Korean firms sell StarLink corn for edible oil
Korean firms sell StarLink corn for edible oilSEOUL (Asia Pulse) June 28 - Four food processors processed corn importscontaining the genetically-modified corn StarLink to starch and cornsprout and sold them for edible use to food and cooking oil makers, theKorea Food and Drug Administration (KFDA) said today.StarLink kernels from the United States are banned for human consumptionand are for livestock feed and industrial goods only.The four companies are Shin Dong Bang, Samyang Genex Corp., Doosan CornProducts Korea Inc. and Daesang Co.They processed a combined 141,372 tons of American corn, including the USbio-engineered corn, through edible corn treatment facilities to starchand sprout.The administration has found that 34.4 tons of the industrial starch weresold for edible use to baking powder manufacturers and 4,061 tons ofsprout, enough to make 1.4 million liters of cooking oil, went to fourcooking oil makers.After examining corn starch and cooking oil goods on the market, a KFDAspokesman said the allergy-causing element of StarLink was not found inthese finished products.Even if people digest oil made of StarLink contained corn, it wouldn'tharm them because harmful components of the genetically-modified food arecleared through refinement processes, he added.The administration notified local governments where the four foodprocessors are headquartered to take necessary administrative stepsagainst them for violating the relevant laws, including imposing fines orsuspending operations.