China seizes on Mattel apology to emphasize safety
BEIJING (Reuters) - China highlighted Mattel's apology over its recall of huge numbers of toys on Monday to press Beijing's claim that its exports are generally safe and foreign politicians and media have unfairly hyped quality scares.
Before those recalls, a spate of complaints involving unsafe Chinese products ranging from other toys and seafood to toothpaste that entered EU and U.S. markets prompted calls on both sides of the Atlantic for stricter scrutiny of made-in-China goods.
Thomas Debrowski, executive vice president of worldwide operations for toymaker Mattel Inc, apologized on Friday following recalls of about 21 million Chinese-made toys over five weeks. The recalls stoked U.S. complaints that lax Chinese quality controls threatened foreign consumers.
"Mattel takes full responsibility for these recalls and apologizes personally to you, the Chinese people and all of our customers who received the toys," Debrowski told China's quality watchdog chief, Li Changjiang, in Beijing.
The vast majority of recalled toys suffered from a design defect that was Mattel's own fault, Debrowski said.
Mattel subsequently issued a statement saying his words had been "mischaracterized" -- though it did not specify how -- and his apology was directed at buyers of its toys.
But China's state-run media have seized on his remarks to make their government's case that the country has been the victim of unfair accusations echoed throughout the international media.
"The apology, though delayed, should help dispel the suspicion American customers harbor against Chinese-made products," the China Daily said in an editorial.
"Its (Mattel's) reputation will be impaired when the whole truth about the recalls is finally made public." Continued...
Pledge to support economies
G20 financial leaders pledged to prepare strategies to end emergency support for their economies, but to keep the aid flowing until recovery was assured. Full Article | Related Story













