Cheese in Russia Is Fake, Smuggled From Ukraine.
Up
to a quarter of ‘cheese products’ sold in Russia were produced in
Ukraine, circumventing Moscow’s embargo on food imports, according to
Russia’s state agricultural watchdog.
Russia
placed restrictions on food imports, including dairy, from countries
that enacted sanctions against Moscow after its annexation of Crimea
from Ukraine in 2014. The embargo has been a boon for domestic Russian
producers, but consumers have complained about a proliferation of “fake
cheese” — dairy products made with milk-substitutes.
Up
to 300,000 tonnes of Ukrainian cheese products are entering Russia
every year after being repackaged in Belarus, Russia’s agricultural
watchdog Rosselkhoznadzor spokeswoman Yulia Melano told the RBC business portal Tuesday.
“In
all likelihood, we’re talking about the legalization of Ukrainian
cheese or protein and fat products through Belarus,” reads a letter
written by Rosselkhoznadzor head Sergei Dankvert that was obtained by
RBC.
The
Ukrainian ‘cheese products’ mostly consist of vegetable oils, rather
than dairy, and are imported via Belarus under the guise of Macedonian
or Iranian cheese, according to the letter.
Cheese-like
products could account for more than half of all cheeses sold in
Russia, Andrei Karpov, the executive director of the Association of
Retail Trade Companies (AKORT), was cited as saying by RBC.
Rosselkhoznadzor
does not yet regulate cheese products, which are made almost entirely
out of milk-substitutes, and does not officially track its imports.
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