Basa Fillets Warning

Someone sent me this info not sure how true it is but i tend to believe it.

BASA FILLETS are a common fish in all the local food stores.

Many are snatching up the fish at supermarkets as they are very cheap.
The fish looks good but read the article and you will be shocked.

This product is from Vietnam.

Do you eat this frozen fish called BASA? ( Pangasius, Vietnamese River Cobbler, White Catfish, Gray Sole )

Industrially farmed in Vietnam along the Mekong River, BASA or Pangas or whatever they're calling it, has only been recently introduced to the French market. However, in a very short amount of time, it has grown in popularity in France. They are very, very affordable (cheap), are sold in filets with no bones and they have a neutral flavor and texture; many would compare it to cod and sole, only much cheaper. But as tasty as some people may find it, there's, in fact, something hugely unsavory about it. I hope the information provided here will serve as very important information for you and your future choices. Here's why it is better left in the shops and not on your dinner plates:

1. BASAS or Pangas are teeming with high levels of poisons and bacteria. (industrial effluents, arsenic, and toxic and hazardous by-products of the growing industrial sector, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), DDT and its metabolites (DDTs), metal contaminants, chlordane-related compounds (CHLs), hexachlorocyclohexane isomers (HCHs), and hexachlorobenzene (HCB) ).

The reason is that the Mekong River is one of the most polluted rivers on the planet and this is where basa/pangas are farmed and industries along the river dump chemicals and industrial waste directly into it. Avoid eating them because they contain high amounts of contamination. Regardless of Reports and recommendations against selling them, supermarkets still sell them, knowing full well that they are contaminated.

2. They freeze Basa/Pangas in contaminated river water.

3. BASA/Pangas are raised in Vietnam . Pangas are fed food that comes from Peru ( more on that below ), their hormones ( which are injected into the female Pangas ) come from China . ( More about that below ) and finally, they are transported from Vietnam to other countries .

4. There's nothing natural about Basa/Pangas - They're fed dead fish remnants and bones, dried and ground into a flour (from South America), manioc ( cassava ) and residue from soy and grains. This kind of nourishment doesn't even remotely resemble what they eat in nature. But what it does resemble is the method of feeding mad cows ( cows were fed cows, remember? ). What they feed basa/pangas is completely unregulated so there are most likely other dangerous substances and hormones thrown into the mix. The basa/pangas grow 4 times faster than in nature, so it makes you wonder what exactly is in their food? Your guess is as good as mine.

5. Basa/Pangas are injected with Hormones Derived from Urine. They inject female Basa/Pangas with hormones made from the dehydrated urine of pregnant women, the female Pangas grow much quicker and produce eggs faster ( one Basa/Panga can lay approximately 500,000 eggs at one time ). Essentially, they're injecting fish with hormones ( they come all of the way from a pharmaceutical company in China ) to speed up the process of growth and reproduction. That isn't good. And also consider the rest of the reasons to NOT eat BASA.

6. You get what you pay for - and then some. Don't be lured in by insanely cheap price of Basa/Pangas. Is it worth risking your health and the health of your family?

7. Buying Basa/Pangas supports unscrupulous, greedy corporations and food conglomerates that don't care about the health and well-being of human beings. They are only concerned about selling as many basa/pangas as possible to unsuspecting consumers. These corporations only care about making more money at whatever cost to the public..

8. Basa/Pangas WILL make you sick - If you don't get ill with vomiting, diarrhea and effects from severe food poisoning, congratulations, you have an iron stomach! But you're still ingesting POISON not "poisson".

Final important note: Because of the prodigious amount of availability of Basa/Pangas, be warned that they will certainly find their way into other foods like imitation crab sticks, fish sticks, fish terrines, and probably in some pet food too. Just check the Ingredient List to see if Basa is one of the ingredients. Good Luck.

You have been warned !!!

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Member of the Offshore Angling Club of WA (Beach Branch) www.beachfishingwa.org.au

 


wadetolley's picture

Posts: 2258

Date Joined: 27/06/08

thanks

Thu, 2009-12-10 18:07

thanks for the info

desmond's picture

Posts: 116

Date Joined: 27/12/06

yummy

Thu, 2009-12-10 18:17

Some restaurants where I'm at are serving it up as catfish ... which is technically correct. And they are really cheaper. But I think they are farm raised and not in the river. They look a little like mekong catfish but are more streamlined. Had similar cats in my tank that we bought at 2 inches that out grew the the space. So we dumped them into a school pond where they grew almost 3 ft.

We were fed this every other day during training college - we were happy to have something edible.

Not sure if they are tested by our local AgriFoods agency. Think you'd have to check with you local authority.

Posts: 896

Date Joined: 25/05/09

fark that i dont eat

Thu, 2009-12-10 18:25

fark that i dont eat imported sea food shit , what is australia coming to jeezus christ aye

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living is fishing

Posts: 1535

Date Joined: 30/12/08

Thanks Carolyn.

Thu, 2009-12-10 19:01

I brought a box of this shit Years ago of a Action shop now IGA and I return it because it was cotaminated with worms.... thats worms big ones too. What do we pay the all but a waste of space health department for. Just another R/S group of public servants failing to do the job we pay them for.

chrisp's picture

Posts: 1217

Date Joined: 24/05/08

Ha ha,,basa

Thu, 2009-12-10 19:46

Who knows what your eating.Just another endorsement to buy local!!

Faulkner Family's picture

Posts: 17861

Date Joined: 11/03/08

just as well we dont use

Thu, 2009-12-10 22:07

just as well we dont use that shite at our shop. 

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RUSS and SANDY. A family that fishes together stays together

Posts: 1075

Date Joined: 30/03/08

http://www.youtube.com/watch?

Thu, 2009-12-10 22:28

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fx4cykHy0RM

Hows that for a fish sanctuary

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Angling tourism is worth $10 billion to the Australian economy - 90000 jobs; more than any sport; spread the word

Feral's picture

Posts: 1508

Date Joined: 01/11/06

this has been doing the

Thu, 2009-12-10 22:11

this has been doing the rounds for years ... i was a seafood manager at action/IGA for years and i would tell my costomers not to buy it ... but guess what  -they still bought it , it is the biggest selling range of seafood in australia. restaurants,fish and chip shops all stock it, and most are still selling imported fish of other kinds as well. 95% of the snapper you get is white snapper and gold spot/king from indonesia. all i can suggest is if you dont like eating imported fish is to catch your own or buy it fresh.

Posts: 2318

Date Joined: 03/05/06

thanks but no thanks

Thu, 2009-12-10 23:23

wish I hadn't watched that video   ;-)

teto's picture

Posts: 44

Date Joined: 24/11/08

Went to the Mekong several

Fri, 2009-12-11 10:00

Went to the Mekong several years ago, what I saw was absolutely disgusting. I only eat fish I catch, at least I know were it come from.