Chamber
Plenary, 22 Sep 1999
22 Sep 1999 · S1 · Plenary
Item of business
Beef on the Bone
Will the minister explain why she told me in a written answer of 17 August that
"When considering the Beef Bones Regulations it would . . . not be sensible to ignore the position in the rest of the United Kingdom."—[Official Report, Written Answers, 17 August 1999; Vol 1, p 207.]— but she is happy to do that now?
The key concerns of the chief medical officer, which the minister outlined in her statement, clearly apply across the whole of the United Kingdom. Will she publish in detail why and how those concerns have led the various medical officers to come to different conclusions?
Can the minister explain what she means by a definitive estimate? I would have thought that a figure was either definitive or an estimate, but not both.
Can the minister explain why the six-months review promised on 1 February is now so late? Why, when Professor Donaldson's previous report said that
"the review should pay particular attention to the incidence of BSE infected cattle" and when there have been only 25 cases of BSE in Scotland this year—less than 2 per cent of the Great Britain figure—did a Scottish Executive source say yesterday:
"There is no new evidence so why we should change our position now"?
Does the minister agree that Scottish agriculture—and, indeed, the Scottish consumer— deserve better than the lack of urgency that was shown in today's statement and that the research and the six-months review that was promised on 1 February should be brought forward?
Does the minister agree now more than ever with the statement that the beef-on-the-bone ban is "a ludicrous policy"? That is not my statement, but a statement made on 1 March this year by Charles Kennedy, then the Liberal Democrat agriculture spokesman and now the leader of the party to which the Minister for Rural Affairs belongs.
"When considering the Beef Bones Regulations it would . . . not be sensible to ignore the position in the rest of the United Kingdom."—[Official Report, Written Answers, 17 August 1999; Vol 1, p 207.]— but she is happy to do that now?
The key concerns of the chief medical officer, which the minister outlined in her statement, clearly apply across the whole of the United Kingdom. Will she publish in detail why and how those concerns have led the various medical officers to come to different conclusions?
Can the minister explain what she means by a definitive estimate? I would have thought that a figure was either definitive or an estimate, but not both.
Can the minister explain why the six-months review promised on 1 February is now so late? Why, when Professor Donaldson's previous report said that
"the review should pay particular attention to the incidence of BSE infected cattle" and when there have been only 25 cases of BSE in Scotland this year—less than 2 per cent of the Great Britain figure—did a Scottish Executive source say yesterday:
"There is no new evidence so why we should change our position now"?
Does the minister agree that Scottish agriculture—and, indeed, the Scottish consumer— deserve better than the lack of urgency that was shown in today's statement and that the research and the six-months review that was promised on 1 February should be brought forward?
Does the minister agree now more than ever with the statement that the beef-on-the-bone ban is "a ludicrous policy"? That is not my statement, but a statement made on 1 March this year by Charles Kennedy, then the Liberal Democrat agriculture spokesman and now the leader of the party to which the Minister for Rural Affairs belongs.
In the same item of business
The Presiding Officer (Sir David Steel):
NPA
The next ministerial statement is on beef on the bone. The Minister for Health and Community Care will take questions at the end of her statement. I remind m...
The Minister for Health and Community Care (Susan Deacon):
Lab
I am grateful for the opportunity to make this statement to the chamber today. Members will recall that in last week's food safety debate, I touched on the E...
Alasdair Morgan (Galloway and Upper Nithsdale) (SNP):
SNP
Will the minister explain why she told me in a written answer of 17 August that "When considering the Beef Bones Regulations it would . . . not be sensible t...
Susan Deacon:
Lab
Alasdair Morgan put a number of questions—I lost count at eight—but I will attempt to answer them in turn. I was quoted as having said previously that we sho...
Alex Johnstone (North-East Scotland) (Con):
Con
The Conservative group has always considered the ban to be unjustified. I have a few questions— the few left to me after those of Mr Morgan—that I would like...
Susan Deacon:
Lab
I have repeatedly argued that matters such as this should not be reduced to party political debate and I am going to try to adhere to my own advice, but I mu...
Mr Mike Rumbles (West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine) (LD):
LD
Everyone I have come across in the beef industry agrees that the Executive's policy must put public health first. My question focuses on the medical advice t...
Susan Deacon:
Lab
On a small point of clarification, the Oxford group's scientific advice will be available in November. The CMO for Scotland has suggested that a further revi...
Dr Richard Simpson (Ochil) (Lab):
Lab
Will the minister confirm that the number of cases of new- variant CJD and the number of deaths are still rising? Does she agree that were the Oxford study r...
Susan Deacon:
Lab
I agree with Dr Simpson that considerable uncertainty remains about the eventual size of the variant CJD epidemic. It is difficult to say with certainty how ...
Alex Fergusson (South of Scotland) (Con):
Con
The minister openly and rightly drew attention to the fact that the Scottish CMO expects there to be more than 2,200 cases of BSE in Great Britain this year....
Susan Deacon:
Lab
I repeat that either this Executive acts on the basis of the medical advice that it is given, or it does not. I recall Alasdair Morgan asking a week ago, in ...
Brian Adam (North-East Scotland) (SNP):
SNP
I would like to explore the difference in view a bit further. Will the minister publish the criteria by which the judgment on lifting the ban will eventually...
Susan Deacon:
Lab
The only thing that we, as the Government, will continue actively to consider, and have actively considered since the Scottish Executive came into being, is ...
The Presiding Officer:
NPA
I apologise to members who were not called, but I remind members that long questions simply cut out colleagues. That is what has happened today.