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Presence Of Peanut In Batches Of Dunnes Stores Spice Products.

Food Safety Authority of Ireland warn of the presence of peanut in batches of Dunnes Stores Spice Products.

Alert Summary dated Thursday, October 3rd 2024.

Allergy Alert Notification: 2024.A36
Allergen: Peanut
Product Identification: Dunnes Stores Mild Curry Powder, pack size: 36g; Dunnes Stores Cajun Seasoning, pack size: 35g; Dunnes Stores Medium Madras Curry Powder, pack size: 36g;
Dunnes Stores Hot Curry Powder, pack size: 36g;
Batch Code: Please refer to table below for details

Product.Pack Size.Batch Code.Best Before Date.
Donnes Stores Mild Curry Powder.36g;L24255776;
L24254776;
End April 2026.
Dunnes Stores Cajun Seasoning.35g.L24101723;
L24114723;
L24152762;
L24155762;
L24169762;
L24200762;
L24233856;
L24243856;
L24262856;
L24263856;
L24264856;
L24274856;
L2421276
5;
End Feb 2026,
End May 2026
and End Jun 2026.

Dunnes Stores Medium Madras Curry Powder.36g.L24264856;
L24274856;
L24212765;
End May 2026.
Dunnes Stores Hot Curry Powder36g.L24254819End April 2026

Message: The implicated batches of Dunnes Stores spice products listed above contain peanut residue in the mustard powder, which is not declared on the label.
This may make the affected batches unsafe for consumers who are allergic to or intolerant of peanut.

Progress, Economic Prosperity And Health Threatened.

Progress, economic prosperity, and health all threatened unless Ireland increases the scale, pace, and ambition of environmental action.

Dul chun cinn, rathúnas geilleagrach agus sláinte i mbaol mura méadaíonn Éire scála, luas agus uail.(Irish Language Translation: Progress, economic prosperity and health are at risk if Ireland does not increase scale, speed and ambition (pride).

  • Ireland has modernized and prospered since joining the EU over 50 years ago – future prosperity and health are threatened unless we better protect our environment.
  • We are continuously playing catch-up – a forward step in one area is often matched by one or two steps back in another.
  • Actions on many fronts are having positive impacts but are entirely inadequate to deliver a healthy environment.
  • For too long we have merely aimed to ‘get by’, aspiring to only minimum standards – in many instances, we don’t even reach those.
  • Serious action cannot be postponed – we need a rapid and resolute advance in environmental performance driven by a national policy position on the environment.

For too long, the Report says, we have merely aimed to ‘get by’ aspiring to only minimum standards, and then in many instances not even meeting those. The report shows that actions on multiple fronts to address issues are not keeping pace with growing pressures and our environment continues to degrade. What is now needed, the report continues, is a strategic leap, a shared vision for how we will adapt our lives and work to protect our own existence within the next decade, and a national policy statement on the environment that articulates and drives this transition.

Speaking at the launch of the report, Ms Laura Burke, Director General of the EPA said: “We have made immense progress as a nation. Our membership of the EU helped us achieve that. We now look back to a time when we had serious industrial pollution of our rivers, when we relied on over a hundred municipal dumps, when we burned smoky fuel in our cities – and we can never go back to that”.

“But where we are right now,” Ms Burke added, “while it is better, is nowhere near good enough. We are always playing catch-up. We now have virtually no seriously polluted rivers, but we have hardly any pristine ones left, either. We now recycle more, but produce more waste than ever and export much of it. We are taking positive actions across multiple fronts, but they are not keeping pace with the growing pressures, and our environment is being squeezed. Increments now are not best use of scarce time and resources: We need to make a fundamental shift.”

That fundamental shift, according to the report, would start with a national policy position on the environment, that allows for long-term planning and would ensure that the environment is prioritised consistently across decades.

  • The report identifies five key essential areas we must prioritise to deliver the impact we need:
  • We urgently need a national policy position on the environment.
  • We must rigorously implement existing environmental plans and programmes to achieve the benefits that they were developed to deliver.
  • We need to transform our energy, transport, food and industrial sectors.
  • We need to scale up investment in water, energy, transport and waste management infrastructure.
  • We need to understand the absolute link between protecting our environment and protecting our health – harm one and we harm the other.

“We know what we have to do” Ms Burke added. “Our energy, transport, food and industrial sectors are the core of where this transformation can, must, and will happen. We must harness all of our resources to meet this challenge. Not acting now only postpones inevitable change that will be much more difficult, and more costly, later on.”

Dr Micheál Lehane, EPA Director said: “It is clear that our environmental challenges are interconnected and they are complex. We need to drive action across climate, biodiversity, sustainable consumption and pollution goals. This will not be easy and we cannot underestimate the challenges of moving to a path of a less wasteful, regenerative society. The IPCC has highlighted that there is now a rapidly closing window of opportunity to secure a liveable and sustainable future for all. It is not negotiable. We need our air, water and natural environment to continue to prosper. You either change for the environment now or the environment will irrevocably change us and how we live later. We, in Ireland, must do our part in making this sustainable future a reality.”

Ms Laura Burke, Director General of the EPA concluded: “We can no longer take the environment for granted. By taking determined actions, we will ensure we are not going to go back, or playing catch-up. This time, we need to be ahead. A healthier environment is attainable for all and is within our reach.”

This comprehensive State of the Environment Report is available to download from the EPA website by clicking HERE.

FSAI Warn Recall Of M & S Smooth Butternut Squash Soup.

Food Safety Authority of Ireland warn of recall of a batch of M & S Smooth Butternut Squash Soup due to the possible presence of small pieces of metal.

Alert Summary dated Tuesday, October 1st 2024.

Category 1: For Action.
Alert Notification: 2024.45.
Product Identification: M & S Smooth Butternut Squash Soup; pack size: 600g.
Batch Code Use by 06/10/2024.
Country Of Origin: United Kingdom
.

Message: Marks & Spencer are recalling the above batch of its Smooth Butternut Squash Soup, due to the possible presence of small pieces of metal. Recall notices will be displayed at point-of-sale.

Action Required:
Retailers: Same are requested to remove the implicated batch from sale and display a recall notice at the point-of-sale.

Consumers: Customers are advised not to consume the implicated batch.

Almost 100 Cases Prosecuted Under Coco’s Law.

Almost 100 cases prosecuted under Coco’s Law have now been published.

  • Legislation criminalising the sharing of, or threatening to share intimate images without a person’s consent, and distributing, publishing or sending a threatening or grossly offensive communication to another person, introduced in 2021 has been reviewed.
  • Almost 100 cases have been prosecuted by the DPP over the review period, with charges from An Garda Síochána increasing year-on-year.
  • Success of national awareness campaigns in informing public of the legislation.

An operational review of the Harassment, Harmful Communications and Related Offences Act 2020, also known as ‘Coco’s Law’ (named after Nicole ‘Coco’ Fox), shows that almost 100 cases have been prosecuted since it came into effect.

The legislation criminalises the sharing of, or threatening to share intimate images, without a person’s consent, with or without intent to cause harm to the victim.

The Act also seeks to target other areas of harmful communications by creating a new offence of distributing, publishing, or sending a threatening or grossly offensive communication with intent to cause harm and to extend the current offence of harassment to deal with communications about a person, as well as communications to a person.

The review was carried out by the Department of Justice and found positive early indicators in terms of prosecutions taken, the number of reports of intimate image abuse made to a hotline for illegal content, and general awareness of the legislation.

The review found that the Office of Director of Public Prosecutions had taken a total of 99 cases in respect of section 2, 3 or 4 of the Act, between its commencement and the end of 2023.
This included:

  1. A total of 23 cases prosecuted on indictment in the Circuit Court.
  2. The DPP consented to summary disposal on guilty plea for eight cases.
  3. The DPP directed summary disposal on 68 cases.
  4. One case was prosecuted on indictment in the Central Criminal Court.

The review also found that the number of charges issued by An Garda Síochána had risen between commencement in 2021 and the end of 2023. In 2021, there were 22 charges brought. In 2022, that rose to 95, and in 2023 it rose again to 113.

The review noted independent research from August 2021, which found that 69% thought it was against the law to share intimate images without consent, and 51% thought it was against the law to threaten to share intimate images.

A follow up piece of research conducted in November 2023 found that those figures had jumped to 97% and 96%, after the public awareness campaign.

As part of the awareness campaign, the Department of Justice partnered with Hotline.ie to provide a widely accessible reporting mechanism for victims of intimate image abuse. Once illegal content is reported to Hotline, their experts assess the report and decide on next steps.

Any online service provider served by Hotline.ie with an intimate image abuse notice is responsible for removing the content at source.

The review found that, between September 2021 and December 2023, almost 1,500 reports were made to Hotline.ie, which, after assessment, were found to be intimate image abuse.

Some 1,006 of these were images or videos shared without the person’s consent via publicly accessible web-locations;. Hotline.ie was able to get 92% removed.

Hotline.ie also received more than 400 reports relating to threat to share intimate images. This included 366 cases of sexual extortion and 27 threats to share intimate images for harassment purposes.

Incorrectly Declared Crustaceans & Fish On Tasty Nibbles Pickle Products.

Alert Summary dated Friday, September 27th 2024.

Allergy Alert Notification: 2024.A35
Allergens: Crustaceans and Fish
Product Identification: Tasty Nibbles Anchovy Pickle; pack size 400g; Tasty Nibbles Sardine Pickle; pack size 400g; Tasty Nibbles Prawn Pickle; pack size 400g
Batch Code: All batches and all best-before dates
.

Message:
All batches of Tasty Nibbles Anchovy Pickle and Sardine Pickle contain fish which are incorrectly declared on the label. All batches of Tasty Nibbles Prawn Pickle contain crustaceans which are incorrectly declared on the label.

This may make the products unsafe for consumers who are allergic to or intolerant of crustaceans and/or fish.