Burma’s government has said it cannot ensure all imported food and medicine is safe, amid growing international concerns about the safety of products from its giant neighbor, China.

Burma is flooded with Chinese goods-legally imported and smuggled across a porous border-and traders say many are substandard if not harmful.

But the impoverished country’s Food and Drug Administration, or FDA, said it does not have enough resources to control the quality of all imported products, according to a report o­n Sunday in The Myanmar Times, a weekly English-language newspaper.

“The FDA currently has o­nly 100 staff, which is not enough to carry out strict monitoring processes to ensure the safety of the 50 million people,” the agency’s director, Dr Kyaw Lin, told The Myanmar Times.

Nevertheless the FDA’s responsibilities will soon be expanded to include screening cosmetics, consumer goods and medical equipment, the newspaper cited Kyaw Lin as saying.

Burma imported nearly US $1 billion worth of Chinese products in fiscal 2005-2006, while an unknown amount of goods cross the border from its giant northeastern neighbor.

Last week China’s Premier Wen Jiabao ordered food and drug safety bodies to make product quality a top priority after a series of scandals involving tainted food and drugs led to the recall or rejection of a slew of Chinese exports around the world.

Chinese officials, initially reluctant to acknowledge the problem, have vowed more stringent surveillance and a crackdown o­n the country’s countless small, unregulated producers.

According to Burmese traders, who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because they feared reprisals from the country’s repressive government, Chinese imports to Burma are cheaper but of a lower standard than the products China exports to the US and Europe.

The Myanmar Times said China is the fourth biggest supplier of legal pharmaceuticals to Burma behind India, Indonesia and Bangladesh-but that unregulated drugs also cross the border illegally.

Dr Maung Maung Lay, chairman of the Myanmar Pharmaceuticals and Medical Equipment Entrepreneurs Association, told the weekly that 10 to 15 percent of the pharmaceuticals available in the country are fake or flawed.

But poverty and a lack of awareness of the dangers of substandard or cheap medicine means the people of Burma continue to buy Chinese pharmaceuticals.

“People are not educated enough to differentiate between a cheap drug and an expensive but potent one. Another reason why people go for cheaper medicine is because they are poor,” a drug shop owner commented.