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Food minister sparks row by calling for kosher meat labels

April 10, 2008 23:00

By

Leon Symons,

Leon Symons

1 min read

Comments made in a newspaper interview by a government minister responsible for food and farming have been described as a new attack on shechitah.

In the interview published in Monday’s Independent, Lord Rooker, food and farming minister at the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, said he objected to religious slaughter and that all meat killed in that way should be clearly labelled.

“The country, source of origin and method of slaughter for meat ought to be on the label because that way I could stop the bloody halal meat, that is excess to the industry’s requirements, being slipped into the food chain without people being told.” The article said Lord Rooker “accepted the legality of religious slaughter” but said customers should be warned when they might be eating meat killed in such a way. “I’ve been in slaughterhouses. Religious slaughter techniques are something I don’t subscribe to,” he told the paper.

Shimon Cohen, spokesman for Shechita UK, the umbrella body for shechitah organisations, said: “Lord Rooker shows an ignorance of slaughter methods in general and shechitah in particular. His comments… show an extreme and worrying bias.