/ 2 June 2009

Traces of cocaine found in Red Bull in Hong Kong

Hong Kong officials have found traces of cocaine in cans of Red Bull, a few days after Taiwanese authorities confiscated close to 18 000 cases of the popular energy drink.

Officials at the Centre for Food Safety said a laboratory analysis found tiny amounts of the illegal drug in samples of ”Red Bull Cola,” ”Red Bull Sugar-free” and ”Red Bull Energy Drink”, a spokesperson said.

The drink has now been taken off the shelves of major supermarkets, the spokesperson said in a statement issued late on Monday. He added that the amount of cocaine found in the drinks posed little health danger.

Red Bull moved quickly to deny the findings and said independent tests on the same batch of drinks had found no traces of cocaine.

The Centre for Food Safety found traces of cocaine between 0,1 and 0,3 micrograms of the illegal drug per litre, the statement said.

Initially Hong Kong’s commissioner for narcotics Sally Wong said the government was taking legal advice on any possible liability for importers and retailers.

However, after meeting Red Bull representatives on Tuesday, the government issued a statement saying no prosecution was intended, because of ”the absence of prior knowledge of the cocaine content in the product”.

”However, should they continue to deal in any products containing dangerous drugs in future, they might be liable to prosecution,” the statement said.

Wong said some retailers had taken contaminated batches of Red Bull off their shelves and advised those who had not done yet done so to follow suit.

Before Tuesday’s meeting, Red Bull’s Asia Pacific marketing director Daniel Beatty said the firm strongly disputed the findings that cocaine had been found in its product.

”It would have been absolutely impossible for the Hong Kong or any other authorities to have found traces of cocaine in Red Bull Energy Drink,” he said in a statement.

The Hong Kong government said tests on further samples of Red Bull on Tuesday had not detected any cocaine.

The government had asked Red Bull for more samples ”in order to establish whether the existence of traces of cocaine in some samples is a systematic issue or whether it relates to any particular lot or serial number”.

Taiwan officials said on Saturday they had confiscated nearly 18 000 cases of Red Bull imported from Austria after finding it contained traces of the drug.

Taiwanese authorities ordered the drinks to be removed from shelves pending further investigation.

Red Bull, whose advertising slogan is ”Red Bull gives you wings,” was founded by Austrian toothpaste salesperson Dietrich Mateschitz in the 1980s.

It has since become one of the dominant players in the global energy drinks market. — AFP

 

AFP