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China’s Communist Party
ChinaPolitics

China widens kindergarten lead poisoning investigation as central government gets involved

The scandal shocked the nation after more than 200 children in Gansu province were found to have abnormally high blood lead levels

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Police are investigating whether paint was added to food. Photo: Handout
Phoebe Zhangin Shenzhen
China has expanded the probe into a kindergarten lead poisoning scandal that has shocked the nation, with the central government getting involved in a rare intervention in a provincial investigation.

On Saturday night the authorities in Gansu said the investigation would be led by provincial leaders working alongside a task force from the State Council, the country’s cabinet.

Last week, Chinese media reported that 233 of 251 children at the kindergarten in Tianshui, a second-tier city in the northwestern province, were found to have abnormal blood lead levels.
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Parents said local tests had not highlighted that anything was amiss and the problem only came to light when the children were tested in another province.

The local police said on Tuesday that the kindergarten was suspected of using inedible paint to add colour to food and had detained eight people, including the principal.

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The provincial investigation team is headed by party chief Hu Changsheng and governor Ren Zhenhe, working alongside other officials, police and party discipline inspectors.

Experts from the national environmental and health ministries and a task force from the state council’s food safety commission will also be involved, the statement said.

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