Skip to content
Personal information

Dutch Haribo warning cancelled

Dutch Haribo warning cancelled
Published:

The Dutch Food and Consumer Product Safety Authority (NVWA) has withdrawn a health warning relating to Haribo sweets.

At the end of May, NVWA published a warning because of the possible presence of cannabis in a batch of Haribo Happy Cola F!ZZ 1,000 grams with a best-before date of January 2026.

Dutch media reported several members of one family became ill after eating the sweets.

However, based on results from an investigation by the Netherlands Forensic Institute, NVWA said the alert can be cancelled.

The Netherlands Forensic Institute said no cannabis or related substances were found after testing supplied batches from the production or distribution process.

This finding differs from the result of indicative tests carried out by the police.

An investigation is underway involving the Public Prosecution Service (Openbaar Ministerie) into why the children became unwell.

A notice on the European Commission’s Rapid Alert System for Food and Feed (RASFF) states that sweets came from Spain and were also distributed to Belgium, France, and Luxembourg.

(To sign up for a free subscription to Food Safety News, click here)

More in Government Agencies

See all

More from News Desk

See all
Whole peaches recalled because of Listeria

Whole peaches recalled because of Listeria

/
Your Support Protects Public Health

Food Safety News is nonprofit and reader-funded. Your gift ensures critical coverage of outbreaks, recalls, and regulations remains free for everyone.