The Reporter (Vacaville)

Lawmakers throw pig guts, punches on Taiwan parliament floor

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Lawmakers in Taiwan got into a fistfight and threw pig guts at each other Friday over a soon-to-be enacted policy that would allow imports of U. S. pork and beef.

Premier Su Tsengchang was due to give a regularly scheduled policy report to lawmakers on Friday morning about the pork policy when opposition party lawmakers from the Nationalis­t party, also known as the KMT, blocked his attempt to speak by dumping bags of pig organs. Legislator­s from the ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party attempted to stop them, resulting in chaos and an exchange of punches.

A DPP lawmaker wrestled a KMT lawmaker to the floor in the scuffle.

President Tsai Ing-wen’s administra­tion lif ted a longstandi­ng ban on imports of U. S. pork and beef in August, in a move seen as one of the first steps toward possibly negotiatin­g a bilateral trade agreement with the U. S. The ban is due to be lifted in January.

That decision has met with fierce opposition, both from the KMT and individual citizens. The new policy allows imports of pork with acceptable residues of ractopamin­e, a drug that some farmers add to animal feed that promotes the growth of lean meat.

On Sunday, thousands of people marched in Taipei to protest the imports.

U. S. pork would account for a small percentage of the island’s consumptio­n, but the Nationalis­t party has seized on the issue in an effort to mobilize support following successive failures at the polls.

“W hen you were in the opposition, you were against U. S. pork, now that you’re in power, you’ve become a supporter of U. S. pork,” said KMT legislator Lin Wei- chou, who led the group of lawmakers protesting the policy on Friday. They wore black Tshirts that read “oppose ractopamin­e-pork.”

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