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Japan's dishonest labelling scandal spreads to top department stores

Japan’s hotels, restaurants and food shops were being warned on Wednesday over dishonest labelling amid a growing scandal that is threatening to undermine the country’s reputation for safe, high-quality produce.

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Takashimaya executive Yutaka Masuyama (centre) apologise after the department store used giant tiger prawns to make a 'Japanese tiger prawn' terrine in Tokyo. Photo: AFP

Japan’s hotels, restaurants and food shops were being warned on Wednesday over dishonest labelling amid a growing scandal that is threatening to undermine the country’s reputation for safe, high-quality produce.

The direction comes as top department stores became the latest Japanese firms to admit they had been selling food with labels falsely claiming high-quality or expensive ingredients.

“It’s extremely regrettable as it seriously undermines consumer confidence,” Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told a regular press conference, speaking about the widening scandal.

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“The Consumer Affairs Agency will take strict actions under the law (against misleading representations),” he said.

Suga, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s right-hand man, was speaking after luxury department store chain Takashimaya admitted that for years labels claiming the use of top-of-the-range prawns or freshly-squeezed orange juice sat on produce made with inferior ingredients.

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For example, the department store used giant tiger prawns to make a “Japanese tiger prawn” terrine, sold under the luxury French brand Fauchon.

Japanese tiger prawn is widely considered a top shrimp and one that can command premium prices in this seafood-loving nation, while giant tiger prawns are more widely available.

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