China detains 11 for smashing halal food shop
Customers vandalised the store after discovering non-halal foods had been transported along with halal products
BEIJING:
Police in western China detained 11 people after a crowd of angry customers in early May smashed a halal shop suspected of mishandling food prepared according to Islamic custom, state media said.
A group of "law-breakers" in Xining, the capital of Qinghai province, broke into a store on May 1 and vandalised it after discovering that non-halal foods had been transported along with halal products, a violation of regulations.
An investigation by authorities revealed that suspicions that sausages had been sold at the store were not true, state-run Xining Television reported on Friday.
Read: Spain proposes new 'kebab law'
The owner made "sincere apologies" to the store's Muslim customers, the report said, adding that it was ordered to stop selling, transporting and producing halal products and received a fine.
It said the owner, surnamed Li, belonged to the Hui Muslim community and that most of the store's staff were Muslim.
Food safety and quality remains a major concern in China after a series of high-profile scandals.
Read: 'Shariah compliant' adult shop to open in Makkah
Wang Zuoan, the head of China's State Administration for Religious Affairs, said in an interview published on Sunday in the ruling Communist Party's Study Times, that China must "protect the legal interests of religious groups".
Police in western China detained 11 people after a crowd of angry customers in early May smashed a halal shop suspected of mishandling food prepared according to Islamic custom, state media said.
A group of "law-breakers" in Xining, the capital of Qinghai province, broke into a store on May 1 and vandalised it after discovering that non-halal foods had been transported along with halal products, a violation of regulations.
An investigation by authorities revealed that suspicions that sausages had been sold at the store were not true, state-run Xining Television reported on Friday.
Read: Spain proposes new 'kebab law'
The owner made "sincere apologies" to the store's Muslim customers, the report said, adding that it was ordered to stop selling, transporting and producing halal products and received a fine.
It said the owner, surnamed Li, belonged to the Hui Muslim community and that most of the store's staff were Muslim.
Food safety and quality remains a major concern in China after a series of high-profile scandals.
Read: 'Shariah compliant' adult shop to open in Makkah
Wang Zuoan, the head of China's State Administration for Religious Affairs, said in an interview published on Sunday in the ruling Communist Party's Study Times, that China must "protect the legal interests of religious groups".