Thursday, April 19

The Failure of a System

The number of deadly toys found on sale in Britain doubled last year. This is because of the increasing volume of Chinese imports.
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This has brought an influx of games and gifts, manufactured in China, with the potential to poison, suffocate or choke. So bad has the situation become that trusted brands and principle retailers such as Argos, have been forced to withdraw products deemed to put children at serious risk.
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Why is this the case ? Well, back in 1988, the EU promulgated the Toy Safety Directive, tied in with the now familiar CE marking system, the system in its entirety requiring toys to be subjected to stringent testing at the point of production, following which the CE label is attacked.The crucial part of the system is that, provided the product bears the magic symbol, it cannot be inspected at the port of entry into the EU, and must be permitted entry on the basis of the paperwork, without further checks. By such means did the EU Commission "sell" the system to third country producers, arguing that it would "bring about cost savings".
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Simply, all the producers must do is ensure that the product meets EU standards - assessed by a process of self-certification, with no independent checks. Then the CE mark can be affixed and importing member states "may not prohibit, restrict or impede the placing in the market or putting into service of the product." Thus, claims the commission, "CE marking can be regarded as the products trade passport for Europe."Indeed, that is what it has become - at the price of emasculating domestic controls over the safety of imported toys.
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In the absence of physical checks at the port of entry, any non complaince with EU safety standards has to be picked up by Trading Standards Officers, but only on the basis of consumer complaints. By then, it is often too late – the damage has already, often sadly, been done.
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So what we have is therefore, the failure of a system, which now puts British children at risk. So, even when the EU fouls up, it goes unnoticed, simply because the media has no real idea how the EU system of government actually works.

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