Formaldehyde contamination In July 2007, the
Philippine Bureau of Food and Drugs (BFAD) said that four imported foods made in China contained
formalin and should be recalled. Those listed were White Rabbit Creamy Candy, Milk Candy, Balron Grape Biscuits, and Yong Kang Foods Grape Biscuits. The White Rabbit brand claimed that
counterfeit candies, known to exist in the Philippines, may have been the cause of the contaminated sweets, citing an independent report by the
Shanghai affiliate of the Swiss-based SGS Group, the world's largest
inspection and testing company, as saying that samples of candy ready to be exported overseas contained no toxic substances. In
Singapore, the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA) also stated after conducting tests that the candy was safe for consumption. On July 24, 2007, the
National Agency of Drug and Food Control of Republic of Indonesia stated that 39 imported foods made in China, including White Rabbit Creamy Candy sold in
Jakarta, contained formaldehyde, and sealed them for destruction. It urged the public not to consume these products. On August 9, 2007, Indonesia stated that samples of White Rabbit candy sold in
Palembang and
Mataram also contained formaldehyde, and took similar actions.
Melamine contamination In September 2008, there were more than 52,000 reported cases of children made sick by
melamine-tainted
dairy products in China. Most of these children were diagnosed with kidney problems. White Rabbit Creamy Candy was listed among the many milk-based food products made in China that were
contaminated with melamine and was recalled from store shelves. The same form of contamination was responsible for the
Chinese melamine
pet food contamination scandal in 2007, during which thousands of pet dogs and cats died of
kidney failure after eating
pet food contaminated with melamine. On September 24, 2008, the UK supermarket chain
Tesco pulled all White Rabbit Candy from their shelves "as a precaution" in response to the melamine-contamination reports. The Hong Kong Centre for Food Safety issued an advisory on the product after it tested positive for melamine in their laboratories, with more than six times the legal limit for the chemical.
Australia issued a recall. while also noting that although the level of melamine was high in the candy, it did not pose the same sort of danger that the contaminated infant formula did. White Rabbit candies exported to
New Zealand were also tested, and though melamine was found, as there had been no harm done yet they were unable to recall. Two reporters, using the
Singaporean test results, calculated that "a 60kg adult [...] would have to eat more than 47 White Rabbit sweets [...] every day over a lifetime to exceed the tolerable threshold" for melamine. In September 2008, United States
Food and Drug Administration warned consumers about White Rabbit candy over concerns of possible melamine contamination, and the American distributor, Queensway Foods Inc., ordered a recall. Tests conducted in
South Africa confirmed similar results. ==Golden Rabbit==