by Agency Reporter
HONG
KONG: McDonald’s Corp (MCD.N), which has over 2,000 restaurants in
China, will restore its full menu in some Chinese cities this week, a
fortnight after a food safety scandal forced the company to halt the
sale of staples such as Big Macs and Spicy McWings, Reuters reported on Monday.
The world’s biggest restaurant chain
will resume full menus in Beijing and Guangzhou this week, while menus
in Shanghai will return to normal this month, a company spokeswoman in
China told Reuters on Monday.
She said some other cities had also resumed full menus, but declined to give more details.
McDonald’s last month cut ties with
Shanghai Husi Food, a unit of US-based OSI Group LLC, after a television
report triggered investigations into improper meat-handling procedures
at Shanghai Husi’s factory. McDonald’s decision led to meat shortages at
many of its restaurants in China.
The scandal highlights the challenges
facing inspectors in China’s fast-growing and sprawling food industry.
China is Yum Brands Inc’s (YUM.N) biggest market and McDonald’s
third-largest by outlets.
The resumption process is taking longer than expected, the McDonald’s spokeswoman said.
“We will go back to the origin of the
food, where the food comes from, so it will take a longer time and is
not as easy as people may think.
“We are doing a very stringent
inspection to make sure the food meets the government’s requirement and
McDonald’s standards,” she said.
In Hong Kong, McDonald’s said it was now
directly importing lettuce and fresh onions from the United States and
Taiwan, and items on its menu such as Big Mac, Quarter Pounder with
Cheese, McChicken and Grilled Chicken Burger were restored on its menu
on Monday.
Shanghai Husi was accused earlier this
month by a television documentary of mixing expired meat with fresh
produce and forging production dates. Shanghai regulators said the
company had forged the dates on smoked beef patties and then sold them
after they expired.
Chinese police have taken six executives of Shanghai Husi into custody, state media reported on Sunday.
The food safety scare is testing local
consumers’ loyalty to foreign fast-food chains. Yum, owner of the KFC
and Pizza Hut chains, said last month that the scandal had caused
“significant negative” damage to sales at its restaurants.
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