Horse News

Horsemeat in Tesco burgers prompts apology in UK papers

Information supplied by the BBC

Tesco has placed full-page adverts in a number of national UK newspapers apologising for selling beefburgers that were found to contain horsemeat

TESCO Value BurgersThe supermarket giant said it and its supplier had let customers down and promised to find out “what happened”.

On Tuesday, it emerged Irish food inspectors had found almost 30% horsemeat in one brand sold by Tesco.

Smaller amounts were also found in beefburgers sold by Iceland, Lidl and Aldi and Dunnes.

Officials said the contaminated products – on sale in the UK and the Irish Republic – posed no risk to human health and had been removed from shop shelves.

‘Full refund’

In its advertisement, which has the headline “We Apologise”, Tesco said: “We and our supplier have let you down and we apologise.

“So here’s our promise. We will find out exactly what happened and, when we do, we’ll come back and tell you.

“And we will work harder than ever with all our suppliers to make sure this never happens again.”

Tesco confirmed the products affected were its Tesco Everyday Value 8 x Frozen Beef Burgers (397g), Tesco 4 x Frozen Beef Quarter Pounders (454g) and a branded product, Flamehouse Frozen Chargrilled Quarter Pounders.

It stressed it had “immediately withdrawn from sale all products from the supplier in question”.

The company also said customers who had any of the contaminated items at home could return them to any Tesco store for a full refund.

The revelations come just one week after Tesco’s chief executive Philip Clarke insisted the company was “back on form” in Britain as it reported its strongest growth in UK Christmas sales for three years.

However, news of the horsemeat contamination was followed by a drop in the company’s shares on Wednesday – wiping hundreds of millions of pounds off its market value.

Speaking in Parliament, Prime Minister David Cameron condemned the situation as “a completely unacceptable state of affairs” and called for an urgent investigation by Britain’s Food Standards Agency (FSA).

“People in our country will have been very concerned to read this morning that when they thought they were buying beefburgers, they were buying something that had horsemeat in it,” he said.

Analysts said it was a public relations blow for Tesco.

Espirito Santo Investment Bank analyst, Caroline Gulliver, said the news was “likely to, at least temporarily, reduce consumers’ trust in the quality of Tesco’s products”, which was unhelpful at a time when the retail giant was seeking to promote “the quality underpinning Tesco own label and Everyday Value products”.

Pig DNA

The FSA said it would continue its review of the traceability of the food products concerned, and would consult local councils and authorities in Ireland over whether legal action should be taken against any of the companies involved.

The Food Safety Authority of Ireland (FSAI), which is conducting similar inquiries, said the meat had come from two processing plants in the Irish Republic – Liffey Meats and Silvercrest Foods – and the Dalepak Hambleton plant in North Yorkshire.

Contaminated burgers had been on sale in Tesco and Iceland in the UK and the Republic of Ireland, where they were also on sale in Dunnes Stores, Lidl and Aldi.

A total of 27 burger products were analysed, with 10 of them containing traces of horse DNA and 23 containing pig DNA.

In addition, 31 beef meal products, including cottage pie, beef curry pie and lasagne, were analysed, of which 21 tested positive for pig DNA.

Iceland and Lidl said they had withdrawn affected products and were investigating the matter.

8 replies »

  1. Seems that the meat packers are trying to force horse meat down peoples throats. If they start slaughtering American horses here in the USA we are all at risk from the same crime, especially school children and fast, frozen food consumers.. All the more reason to push the horse slaughter prevention act here. I wouldn’t put it past them to try it and i don’t trust the USDA or food safety people here.vegetarianism may be the only safe way to go.

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  2. Let us stop the madness. Horse meat is not a viable source of protein. It is full of drugs and can harm your life. Stop horse slaughter now. If you want to die young you fools then you will eat tainted meat from any source. Stop wild horse round ups, Stop the madness now. Don’t be a crazy fool and hurt yourself. Our horses are not food, Get this in your brain.

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  3. This is unreal…wouldn’t put it past any of the processors in this country to do the same thing if we still had horse slaughter plants back in the US. Americans who consume red met in this country would absolutely throw up if they saw what goes on in this plants. It is now worse than ever before with the factory farms. And why are Americans getting fat, diabeties and other diseases? Its probably due to the antibiotics and hormones constantly given to the poor animals who are treated so inhumanely. We need to get the Slaughter and transportation blls done and passed.

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  4. I don’t know why anyone in the UK should worry about horse meat they send thousands of horses to slaughter across their borders every year. According to one of the horse rescues there I was getting newsletters from until I cancelled it said they approved of horses being sent to a “humane slaughter”. So much for the UK.

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