S$7,000 fine for eatery chain involved in ByteDance food poisoning case


Yunhaiyao chief executive Lu Zhi Tao appeared in court on behalf of the company. - ST

SINGAPORE: Catering company Yunhaiyao, which was convicted over its role in the ByteDance mass food poisoning case that affected 171 people, was fined S$7,000 on Thursday (July 17).

District Judge Janet Wang said a “staggering” number of people were affected by the episode and that it was fortuitous no fatality resulted.

Noting that the firm had already been in operation in Singapore for six years, she added: “(The company) had sat on its laurels of complacency and maintained a lackadaisical attitude towards the importance of food safety.”

Yunhaiyao’s chief executive Lu Zhi Tao, who appeared in court on behalf of the company, said it has permanently closed its Northpoint City outlet, where the contaminated food was prepared.

Among other remedial measures, Lu said all of the firm’s chefs have since attended a hygiene course again, and a cleaning company was hired to thoroughly clean all premises that are still open for business.

Through a Mandarin interpreter, he added: “The company has set out a safety check team to check on the quality of cooked food and ingredients at the various retail outlets.”

Meanwhile, the court heard that the other caterer that had been suspended by the Singapore Food Agency (SFA) over the case was eventually found to be uninvolved in the gastroenteritis incident.

The two caterers supplied food to ByteDance, which saw some of its staff members suffer a gastroenteritis incident on July 30, 2024.

The victims had suffered abdominal pain, diarrhoea and vomiting after consuming catered lunches prepared by Yunhaiyao.

SFA prosecuting officer Mohd Rizal told the court that of the 171 victims, 60 were conveyed to hospital and 22 of them were eventually warded for between one and three days.

Yunhaiyao had on July 2 pleaded guilty to one charge under the Sale of Food Act and another under the Environmental Public Health (Food Hygiene) Regulations.

Court documents revealed that the wok-fried diced chicken prepared by Yunhaiyao was found to contain over 200,000 colony-forming units (CFU) per gram of Staphylococcus aureus, a type of pathogen.

This was more than 2,000 times the acceptable level of less than 100 CFU per gram.

Rizal said pathogens exceeding this amount would make the food unsuitable for consumption and that eating such food may cause symptoms of gastroenteritis.

During the inspection of Yunhaiyao’s food preparation premises at its Northpoint City outlet, SFA officers also discovered more than 10 live cockroaches beneath a folded grey plastic mat behind a rack.

Yunhaiyao’s staff immediately disposed of the infested material, said the prosecutor.

The food company’s suspension was lifted by SFA on Aug 16 after it took the necessary remedial measures.

Judge Wang said its remedial steps were fundamental processes that ought to have been put in place from the outset.

She further noted that the firm did not offer an apology or voluntary compensation after the incident.

When Judge Wang asked about its plans to compensate victims, Lu said they were in contact with ByteDance.

“We (ByteDance and Yunhaiyao) have an agreement that we will discuss this further upon the conclusion of this case,” he said through an interpreter.

He added that the firm would post an apology on social media after the case’s conclusion. - The Straits Times/ANN

 

 

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
Singapore , food , poisoning , Bytedance , fine , Yunhaiyao

Next In Aseanplus News

Powerful 7.6-magnitude earthquake strikes Japan's northeast region
Asean News Headlines at 10pm on Monday (Dec 8, 2025)
Residents seen fleeing from their homes as Thailand hits Cambodia border area with airstrikes again
The sun releases strong solar flare, produce strong plasma ejection toward Earth
Japan recalls much-loved Pocky, other Glico chocolate products over smell; six million units of 20 chocolate products affected
India's Tata signs up Intel as major customer for $14 billion chip foray
Thailand urges Myanmar junta to allow transition after vote
377 schools in Cambodia closed due to the border conflict with Thailand
Global leaders pledge US$1.9bil to end polio, protect children worldwide
Actor Jet Li rebuts rumours of heart transplant or blood transfusion to maintain youth

Others Also Read