PARIS, June 8, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – The
thriving halal food industry stole limelight at the three-day World
Food exhibition, which wraps up on Wednesday, June 8, with a
spacious pavilion showcasing a miscellany of trademarked halal
foodstuffs from chocolate to pizza.
“It is an important occasion that brings
together halal food producers, not only in France but also in
Europe,” halal pavilion coordinator Abdel Latif Al-Taef told
IslamOnline.net.
Taef, who chairs the French Council for Muslim
Faith (CFCM) Halal Division, said that the halal gathering serves as
a stepping-stone to the much-anticipated European Day for Halal Food
Industry slated for October 1.
Along with Europe’s giant halal meat firms, the
spacious exhibition featured other companies producing halal-stamped
chocolate, beverages, confectionary and cheese in addition to others
specialized in the Jewish kosher.
Halal Confectionary
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A marketing
officer said leading French hypermarket chains like Carrefour
sell sweet containing traces of pork by-products.
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Salama Halal Confectionary booth has drawn
attention of the exhibition audience with a placard emblazoned
across its rear portraying a red-crossed pig with a phrase saying
‘Don’t give confectionary containing pork by-products to those who
don’t eat pork.’
“Leading French hypermarket chains like
Carrefour sell sweet containing traces of pork by-products, hence,
we decided to launch this halal business,” Salama’s marketing
officer Sandara Assab told IOL.
Taef said the word halal is no longer confined
to meat, citing the booming halal industry in Malaysia, the
exhibition's guest of honor, from toothpaste to
chocolate.
Malaysia is becoming globally recognized as the
world’s halal food hub. It is due to organize an International Halal
Showcase (MIHAS) on July 28-31.
On the sidelines of the exhibition, several
French firms sought Malaysia's expertise in organizing France’s
halal food market.
The managing director of Algodoal & Cie
Antoine Bonnel, lauded Malaysia's expertise and advancement in
promoting halal food.
Malaysian bi-monthly magazine, The Halal Journal, was launched in
February as the first trade and business publication serving the
global halal marketplace.
It provides information and updates on the
global halal market and covers all aspects of the industry, from
food, pharmaceuticals, biotechnology to banking.
Sizable Market
French researcher Jean Christophe Despres said
the sizable Muslim minority in France, estimated at approximately
six million people or 10 percent of the population, made France the
largest halal food market in Europe.
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Despres
said the halal food consumption in France is growing at 15
percent annually.
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Presenting a study, he said halal food
consumption in France is growing at 15 percent annually with
mind-boggling sales of five billion euros compared to Europe’s 15
billion euros.
As halal meat consumption rate stands at 300,000
tons annually, Despres said Muslim consume double the amount of meat
compared with the rest of the French and allocate 30 percent of
their budget to buy meat against 14 percent of
non-Muslims.
The researcher, however, said that halal food
industry in France remains ill-organized, underdeveloped with 80
percent of the business controlled by small shops owned by French of
North African origin or butchers.
“It may be because it is still a nascent
industry in France,” Taef commented.