Watchdog: U.S. should explain probe of halal food company

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Midamar sells a range of packaged meats and frozen foods. The investigation caught the attention of CA-IR, in part because the company has long been prominent in Cedar Rapids’ Muslim-American community, which is one of the oldest in the country, Hooper said.

In court documents, Midamar said information it obtained suggests the government is looking into allegations that it packaged meat as being halal, or prepared in accordance with Islamic rituals, when it was not. Halal typically requires meat to be butchered in a certain way by or under the supervision of a religious figure.

The USDA has oversight over meatpacking and has inspectors at Midamar at the company’s request to ensure it is complying with export regulations. It says products sold with the halal label must be handled according to Islamic law, and its inspectors may verify the label is not false.

But the agency does not have the authority to monitor the rituals used in halal slaughter and leaves it up to religious organizations to determine what is acceptable. Religious scholars have differing interpretations, and there is no agreed-upon definition.

Rasheed Ahmed, president of the Muslim Consumer Group for Food Products, said Midamar has told him that it sells chicken and turkey products that have been slaughtered by machine, rather than hand. Most Islamic scholars would not consider that halal, but some would as long as steps such as prayers were included, he said.

Midamar founder and retired senior director Bill Aossey disputed that claim later Wednesday, saying in an email that all Midamar turkeys and chickens are hand-slaughtered. A company spokeswoman later sent an email saying mechanical slaughter is used in the manufacture of processed chicken items, such as chicken tenders, but all other meat items are hand-slaughtered.

Rabbi Sholem Fishbane, of the Chicago Rabbinical Council, which certifies food as kosher, or prepared according to Jewish laws, said the government could bring fraud charges if a company slapped kosher or halal labels on ordinary meat. But he said that would be different than the government arguing the ritual wasn’t sufficient to qualify since there is disagreement within faiths about that. Because of that, he said he was following the case.

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