Horse Meat: Welsh Food Plant Forced To Close Over Safety Concerns, Two Arrested

Welsh Plant At Centre Of Horse Meat Scandal Forced To Close

A meat plant which was at the centre of the horse meat scandal has been forced to close over food safety concerns, the Food Standards Authority said.

Farmbox Meats Ltd, in Llandre, near Aberystwyth, mid Wales, was one of the first two plants to be raided in the UK after suspicions it was passing off horse meat in products advertised as beef.

The factory was closed and its owner arrested in February, but it was allowed to re-open, with conditional approval to operate until the start of April.

But a spokesman for the Food Standards Agency (FSA) said on Friday: "The FSA today informed Farmbox Meats Ltd of its decision to refuse the business approval to operate as a cutting plant and cold store facility.

"The business is entitled to appeal this decision, therefore the FSA cannot provide further details at this stage."

Dafydd Raw-Rees, 64, the plant's owner, said he planned to appeal against the decision, and threatened to take legal action against the FSA.

"They have made a big mistake taking on Farmbox Meats," he said.

"We have been unfairly treated. There's a lot of companies still trading with lower (FSA) scores."

The FSA warned Farmbox Meats when it was re-opened in March that it would not hesitate to withdraw approval if the business did not comply with all of the agency's requirements.

The FSA raided both Farmbox Meats and Peter Boddy slaughterhouse in Todmorden, West Yorkshire, on February 12 of this year.

Raw-Rees and a 42-year-old man were arrested on suspicion of offences under the Fraud Act.

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