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Thursday, 21.02.2013.

19:09

Commissioner: Public has right to know truth about milk

The Serbian public "has a right to receive fully accurate and complete information about the aflatoxin-contaminated milk", Rodoljub Šabić has said.

Izvor: Tanjug

Commissioner: Public has right to know truth about milk IMAGE SOURCE
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2 Komentari

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winston

pre 11 godina

According to Nenadić, practice has shown that the inspections are either not conducted regularly or methods applied vary from case to case, which results in "the worst" kind of situation, leaving people with no reliable source of information. Hahaha, Mr. Nenadic, we are talking about Serbia here, not and not a civilized EU nation. If inspectors did their job, if contaminated animal feed was not allowed into the food chain, if politicians didn't look the other way, if business men didn't pay bribes and or give political donations, how in the world could we have corruption in Serbia then? And corruption, Mr. Nenadic, is the engine that drives this hopefully to an EU candidate country runs on. I am simply amazed that serbian politicians even want to be in the EU, because for the most part, their game will be over. Maybe it's a take the money and run deal?

T

pre 11 godina

TIS-(This Is Serbia) folks.
We have only been a (true) democracy for a little while now, so let little things like transparent information on public health take time to evolve. After all, most politicians probably don't drink milk so it is of little concern to them that the rest of us do.
When will they learn??

T

pre 11 godina

TIS-(This Is Serbia) folks.
We have only been a (true) democracy for a little while now, so let little things like transparent information on public health take time to evolve. After all, most politicians probably don't drink milk so it is of little concern to them that the rest of us do.
When will they learn??

winston

pre 11 godina

According to Nenadić, practice has shown that the inspections are either not conducted regularly or methods applied vary from case to case, which results in "the worst" kind of situation, leaving people with no reliable source of information. Hahaha, Mr. Nenadic, we are talking about Serbia here, not and not a civilized EU nation. If inspectors did their job, if contaminated animal feed was not allowed into the food chain, if politicians didn't look the other way, if business men didn't pay bribes and or give political donations, how in the world could we have corruption in Serbia then? And corruption, Mr. Nenadic, is the engine that drives this hopefully to an EU candidate country runs on. I am simply amazed that serbian politicians even want to be in the EU, because for the most part, their game will be over. Maybe it's a take the money and run deal?

T

pre 11 godina

TIS-(This Is Serbia) folks.
We have only been a (true) democracy for a little while now, so let little things like transparent information on public health take time to evolve. After all, most politicians probably don't drink milk so it is of little concern to them that the rest of us do.
When will they learn??

winston

pre 11 godina

According to Nenadić, practice has shown that the inspections are either not conducted regularly or methods applied vary from case to case, which results in "the worst" kind of situation, leaving people with no reliable source of information. Hahaha, Mr. Nenadic, we are talking about Serbia here, not and not a civilized EU nation. If inspectors did their job, if contaminated animal feed was not allowed into the food chain, if politicians didn't look the other way, if business men didn't pay bribes and or give political donations, how in the world could we have corruption in Serbia then? And corruption, Mr. Nenadic, is the engine that drives this hopefully to an EU candidate country runs on. I am simply amazed that serbian politicians even want to be in the EU, because for the most part, their game will be over. Maybe it's a take the money and run deal?