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China's food delivery apps worked with 35,000 illegal restaurants

These restaurants weren't properly licensed to operate or were using fake licenses to sell food.

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Aloysius Low Senior Editor
Aloysius Low is a Senior Editor at CNET covering mobile and Asia. Based in Singapore, he loves playing Dota 2 when he can spare the time and is also the owner-minion of two adorable cats.
Aloysius Low
A delivery guy of Meituan Waimai is waiting for red light.

A food delivery driver in China.

Getty Images/Zhang Peng

China has more problems when it comes to food.

The country's food regulator has discovered up to 35,000 restaurants illegally using food delivery apps with a fake license or no license to operate at all.

China's Beijing Market Supervision Administration also blamed these food delivery apps for not having a strict inspection system to review its vendors, reported the South China Morning Post.

China has long been plagued cases by fake rice, milk powderrecycled cooking oil and even tainted fast food, and as a result, has been taking food safety very seriously. It even uses blockchain technology to prevent food fraud.

The offending restaurants were not identified, but delivery apps such as Meituan Dianping, China's version of Deliveroo, has vowed to strengthen its inspection system as well as set up food safety insurance for users.

Together with Alibaba platform Ele.me, both food delivery services together make up for 98 percent of food delivery services in China, with the size of the market exceeding $46.5 billion last year.

Read more: The best meal-kit delivery services