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‘Murderous freefall’: Over 600 Palestinians seeking food killed in 5 weeks

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Investing   来源:Markets  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:The pair are even said to have exchanged text messages and be on a first name basis, Germany's ARD news outlet has reported.

The pair are even said to have exchanged text messages and be on a first name basis, Germany's ARD news outlet has reported.

She thinks TikTok has a responsibility to ensure all products sold on its shopping platform meet safety and labelling standards."It's completely unacceptable and really worrying. Failing to provide ingredient information is potentially very dangerous, and it feels like a complete disregard for the safety of those living with food allergies," she said.

‘Murderous freefall’: Over 600 Palestinians seeking food killed in 5 weeks

Tanya Ednan-Laperouse co-founded The Natasha Allergy Research Foundation in the name of her daughter whoShe said: "'TikTok should be responsible for ensuring that all their UK food sellers meet legislative requirements to sell food products on their app."Any that don't should be immediately removed from the app and investigated, but ideally this should not happen if their checks and balances are rigorous and in place."

‘Murderous freefall’: Over 600 Palestinians seeking food killed in 5 weeks

After her daughter's death, new safety rules, known as "Natasha's Law", were introduced which require full ingredient and allergen labelling on all food made on premises and pre-packed for direct sale.Kate believes TikTok is allowing sellers to "swerve" basic food labelling requirements as the app allows people not to list any ingredients at all and thinks

‘Murderous freefall’: Over 600 Palestinians seeking food killed in 5 weeks

the platform should penalise those who don't provide the correct information.

"Since Natasha's Law has come into effect I feel that, in general, allergy labelling has improved, but it's frightening that a huge platform like TikTok does not have adequate measures to ensure that labelling is in place," she said."For the United States, it's around 10% of the production; it's a big production for me!" she says.

After threatening a 200% mark-up on alcohol from Europe, Donald Trump imposed a 20% tariff on practically all European Union products on 5 April.Four days later, he lowered this to 10%, with the threat that he'd hike it back up again to 20% in July, depending on how trade negotiations pan out. And now Trump is threatening a future tariff of 50% on all goods from the EU.

I ask Ms Tremblay if she's worried. "Yes, sure," she says, "As everybody is."But that is all she will say on the matter. French winemakers are walking on eggshells at the moment, fearful of saying anything that might aggravate the situation.

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