The officials of the four countries urged the EU leadership to draft rules ensuring that food standards are uniform across the bloc. International food companies, they said, are supplying products of lower quality to central and eastern European countries than they deliver to western Europe.
Lab tests showed that some multinational brands use different, often cheaper ingredients in food items sold to Eastern Europe than in products sold in the adjacent Austria and Germany.
The V4 called on the European Commission to draft rules sanctioning companies for quality deficiencies. The call has been apparently ignored by the bloc.
Czech political analyst, right-wing politician and chairman of the country's Republican Party Miroslav Sládek spoke to Sputnik Czech on the issue.
The multinational companies, he said, supply the same brands to Eastern and Central Europe but with different ingredients than to Western Europe.
"They have the same name, same packing and wrapping but completely different ingredients. For example, meat or cacao beans have a lot more malign agents than those supplied to neighboring Austria and Germany. We are 'second-class' EU residents for them, and sold not food but food industry rubbish," he told Sputnik.
It also means the resignation of Andrej Babiš, Deputy Prime Minister responsible for the economy of the Czech Republic. Sládek called him "one of those saboteurs" who deliberately buy food waste in the West, bring it to Eastern and Central Europe, re-process it, pack and feed the residents of the Czech Republic, among others, by passing it off as exclusive ham, for example.
Both the country's government and the parliament are under control of Babiš, he said. He also owns the major part of the country's food industry. His Prague-based Agrofert conglomerate holding company holds the monopoly for the food supplies into the country.
Babiš also owns the major part of the food market, the politician said. But supplies not food but "poison." Neither the government nor the parliament interferes into his business. Babiš simply bribes them to stay silent, he said.
The parliamentary elections could be the only way out, Sládek said, adding that his party knows everything about what is going on in the government and in the parliament.
However there needs to be more courageous people at the head of the Visegrad Group than currently in place. The governments of the Group's member states should behave as the government of sovereign states and not as "Brussels' servants."
This perfectly illustrates that there are "Group A" countries such as Germany, and "Group B" countries which have no voice in the EU.
"I don't think that it is a "two-speed Europe" but rather a "decaying Europe". If we want to secure our future and don't want to have only unhealthy people, we should dissolve the European Union. If it does not work, it should be disbanded," he finally stated.