Transcript Slide 1

PHILIPPINE HALAL CERTIFICATION
AND STANDARDS
By:
Atty. Hj. Abdul Rahman R.T. Linzag
President/CEO – Islamic Da’wah Council of the
Philippines
Secretary General – World Halal Council
GREETINGS/INTRODUCTION:
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At the outset, permit me to congratulate the
brothers and sisters from the government of
Pakistan particularly the Agriculture and Food
Department in organizing this important Pakistan
Workshop on Halal Food here in Karachi,
Pakistan, and for this, I wish to personally extend
my gratitude to the Honorable Secretary of the
Agriculture and Food, Mr. Hamid Ali Khan of the
Ministry of Livestock and Dairy of the Government
of Pakistan and all other officers in facilitating my
travel to your country which I have longed to visit
after its independence as an Islamic country.
BRIEF BACKGROUND:
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Halal Certification in the Philippines has been a useful tool in
helping the Muslims in the Philippines identify products that are
acceptable for use and consumption of the Muslims in the midst of
intricate and diverse production of various processed foods most of
which are produced by company owned and operated by nonMuslims.
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The Islamic Da’wah Council of the Philippines (IDCP) which
is a federation of more than 90 Muslim religious organizations in the
Philippines organized in the different municipalities and Muslim
communities in the Philippines, have started to formulate its rules
and procedures in conducting verification and validation of halal
claims including the setting up of standards on halal certification
since 1987 or thereabouts.
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It is difficult to impose halal standards and procedure to
the manufacturing and food processing industry in the
Philippines, being a non-Muslim country, for a simple
reason that since halal process is basically rooted as a
religious requirement for Muslims, the government could
not accept its rules without violating the separation of the
Church and the State which is enshrined in the Philippine
Constitution,
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Therefore, halal certification is left to us especially the
IDCP which is a non-government organization which is
purely voluntary on the part of the manufacturing
companies.
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Halal Certification is a certification of religious
compliance on the halal requirements of a Muslim
individual.
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Except in a purely Islamic state, halal certification
comes as a purely voluntary device which a
company may avail generally as a marketing tool to
give them a marketing advantage over other
products.
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On account of this situation, it was always difficult
for the IDCP in the Philippines to require companies
to enforce its regulations and standards on the
manufacturing companies who, in general, would
prefer to come to a halal certifying body which do not
have stringent requirements preferably one which
could easily issue halal certification even without
proper verification of the product.
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As a matter of fact, was it not for the requirements of
Muslim countries governments and individuals to
accept products only when they have a proper halal
certification,
these
manufacturers
and
food
producers would not actually take the trouble of even
inviting any Muslim individual or group to their
manufacturing premises.
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The IDCP is the pioneer of halal certification in
the Philippines and which, during the late 80’s have
already been working for technical researches and
development to standardize halal certification
according to the various kinds of products that need
halal certification.
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As a matter of fact, it was only in 1995 or thereabouts that
some companies started knocking at the door of the IDCP for
the halal certification of their products more specifically on
products that are exported to Muslim countries such as
Malaysia and Indonesia.
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Philippines was an agricultural country for many years
but unfortunately, it has not produced sufficient meat
products and livestocks that can supply foreign markets in
comparison with other countries such as Australia and
New Zealand. The products therefore of the Philippines
are mostly processed food and even processed meats in
addition to agricultural products such as coconut oil and
sugar.
THE DEMANDS FOR HALAL CERTIFICATION AND
INVOLVEMENT OF THE MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES:
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When Halal became part of the Codex Alimentarius of the United
Nations in 1998 or thereabouts, some countries including the
Philippines started to notice the need for halal certification. In
fact, our President in the Philippines, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo,
heard for the first time the need for halal certification at a
globalization conference held in Indonesia in 2001 or
thereabouts. When she came to know the need of a halal
certification and realizing that this is a Muslim concern, upon
arrival in Manila, meet with all her cabinet members and directed
each department to formulate a halal development program so
that they can take advantage of the halal industry and as a result,
all the different departments of the Philippine government
including Agriculture, Department of Trade and Industry,
Department of Health, even the Foreign Affairs have their own
halal development programs and specifically creating a halal
certification office under the Office of the President.
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It was during that time, through the Office of the
President, that all companies were directed to avail of
the halal certification benefits for their products. This
had a positive and negative effect in halal
certification. The positive effect is that, company
producers of food and non-food products opened
their mind into halal certification of their products and
therefore it will provide more benefits to Muslims for
employment and for Muslims to consume the
products without much difficulty in finding as to
whether the product is halal or haram. But the
negative effect is that, the office of the government
that issues halal certification and as a result even
foods which uses enzymes, processing aids and
even raw materials from pork origin were certified
halal by this certifying office.
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As a result of this directive of the president, the
certification program of the IDCP suffered some
set back because some of the halal certified
companies of the IDCP received letters from the
government office which told them that the IDCP
halal certification that they have was fake
because their halal certification is the legal and
the valid one for reasons that it is a government
office that issued halal certification.
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It was this situation that compelled the IDCP
to file a Petition before the Supreme Court of the
Philippines, a Petition to declare the Executive
Order of the President as null and void.
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On July 9, 2003, the Supreme Court of the Philippines
decided the issue en banc and declared that the government
office in the Philippines cannot issue halal certification because
the halal certification is a religious function which only a national
religious organization can issue. The said Executive Order No.
46 was declared null and void and the certification of the
government under the Office on Muslim Affairs was declared null
and void and the said office was prohibited from issuing halal
certification.
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The said judicial decree declared that the IDCP is the official
halal certifying authority in the Philippines. This decision of the
Supreme Court of the Philippines was also reinforced by the
rulings of the halal certifying bodies in Malaysia, Indonesia and
many other countries, the last of which was the United Arab
Emirates which accredited the IDCP as the official certifying body
in the Philippines that they could accept.
FORMATION OF THE WORLD HALAL COUNCIL
BEING A FEDERATION OF CERTIFICATION BODIES WORLDWIDE:
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In 1999, the World Halal Council was formed in
Jakarta, Indonesia.
It aims to have a mutual
cooperation and respect among halal certifying bodies
worldwide and standardize halal certification procedure
and technicalities. In addition, this body is operating as
a global body that oversees and attempts to enforce
rules and procedure among certifying bodies worldwide
in order that the halal certification which is in fact a
worldwide program that is intended to serve the
Ummah while at the same time giving opportunities to
Muslim organizations and individuals the opportunity to
do da’wah to Muslims and non-Muslims in their own
locality.
SOME MISCONCEPTIONS ON HALAL CERTIFICATION:
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Generally, Islam is a misunderstood religion and
halal certification has some many misconceptions
not only among the non-Muslims but even among us
Muslims. Some of these misconceptions are:
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1) That halal certified products are only for Muslims;
2) That when the non-Muslims takes halal, they
will become Muslims;
3) That only the Imams can issue Halal Certification;
4) That animals slaughtered by Christians or
Jews, which is allowed in the Qur’an can also
be certified as halal;
5) That halal food can only be produced by
Muslims and many others
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These are some of the misconceptions on halal
certifications, but of course, the proper way to understand
halal certification is to know the meaning and significance
of the word “beyond reasonable doubt”.
The role of a certifying body is to determine whether a
product that he is about to certify is composed of all the raw
materials, processing aids including the packaging are of
halal origin and processed without the possibility of
contamination by non halal or haram material or ingredients
and that he is convinced this is so beyond reasonable doubt.
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Halal Certification is in fact considered now as a
certification of quality. In the Philippines, there a number of
certification process and procedure issued by different
bodies among them are the department of health, bureau of
food and drugs and their concerns are to enforce the
government requirements on certain food and non-food
products.
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For example, that this product must contain Vitamin A, B, C or D
regardless of what source these Vitamins came from and when these
requirements are complied with, the company receives the licensed from
the BFAD. The halal certification will look into the quality and source of
materials that are used in producing the product in compliance with the
requirements of the government.
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Vitamin A for example, some of which are from pork skin, some are
from vegetables and some are from other form of animals which only
technically equipped certifying body can validate with credibility.
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Other certifying body such as ISO refers to international standards.
This refers to management and organizational matters in the production of
halal products. Other certifying bodies like HACCP, etc., These are on
procedural requirements on how people should work, how the employers
and workers should work without encountering hazardous materials and
substances within the working premises.
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GMP is another certification but this refers to
hygiene and sanitation in the preparation especially
on food products. As we will observe except for halal
certification, most of them are concerned on the
quality of the products being produced such as the
origin of its raw materials, how they were processed,
the safeties were imposed on preventing any
contamination to the products
both from raw
materials or its finished products.
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We may have halal certified beef but in the
storage proper, they are placed in the storage along
side with pork meats and other haram substances.
So this cannot be easily noticed or seen by person
who merely visits a company once a year to issue the
renewal of his halal certificate in this product.
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IDCP maintains several of their halal assurance officers on
all halal manufacturing companies to validate the raw
materials and monitor the production of halal products
before a certification is issued on this product. These are of
course in addition to the routinary visit and annual validation
and processes.
Formation of Halal Standards:
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As a result of the stringent requirements of halal being
imposed by the IDCP, it has formulated halal assurance
policies on every production line such as slaughtering of
halal meat, processed food manufacturing, non-food
products such as personal care, packaging, medicine and
logistics.,
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These policies are being reinforced by the halal standard
which is approved by the World Halal Council as an
acceptable halal standard.
PROBLEMS ENCOUNTERED BY A HALAL CERTIFYING BODY:
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Most of the problems encountered by the halal certifying bodies are:
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1) The full cooperation and disclosure of the company of the various ingredients on
their products;
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2) The credibility of other certifying body in other countries which certify some raw
materials or ingredients being imported to the Philippines either as raw materials or
ingredients for a product to be certified by IDCP. Some of these products are known
to be manufactured in countries where there are no certifying bodies but certified
by a trading company located in another country who actually sells the product to
countries that ultimately manufactures them;
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3) Some certifying bodies will also issue certification to products even if they do not
understand the procedure on how the products were processed and what raw
materials were used, what clarifying agents were used, preservatives, enzymes and
others.
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4) Some certifying bodies also rely on laboratory test of the finished product and
they will certify even if they have no authority from the actual manufacturer of the
product.
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These are some of the problems encountered by
credible certifying bodies and which the World Halal
Council is trying to narrow down on its members.
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Since Halal Certification is now considered a
certification of quality, we therefore highly
recommend that Muslims should continue to demand
for a halal certified product because non certified
products are definitely doubtful and only a credible
certification can remove that doubt and to keep us
away from non-compliance to the guidance of Allah
s.w.t.
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Wabillahi Tawfiq Walhidayah!