Deccan Chronicle

Thousands take to the streets in Taiwan against US pork imports

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Taipei, Nov. 22: Thousands of people marched in Taipei's streets on Sunday demanding the reversal of a decision to allow US pork imports into Taiwan, alleging food safety issues.

President Tsai Ing-wen's administra­tion lifted a long-standing ban on US pork and beef imports in August, in a move seen as one of the first steps toward possibly negotiatin­g a bilateral trade agreement with the US.

The ban is due to be lifted in January. That decision has met with fierce opposition, both by the opposition Kuomintang party and individual citizens. The new policy allows imports of pork with acceptable residues of ractopamin­e, a drug added into animal feed that promotes the growth of lean meat that some farmers use in pigs.

The drug is banned by the European Union, but is legal in the United States. Demonstrat­ors marched in front of the Presidenti­al Office Building as part of an annual labor march. “I came here today to oppose the import of ractopamin­e," said Kelvin Chen, a 54-year-old computer engineer who was marching.

"I feel these days many who do business are not ethical. If they mix the US pork with Taiwan pork and then sell it to us average consumers, we as individual­s have no way to know the source of the pork.” “I have a child and when we eat things with ractopamin­e, it's not good for our bodies,” said Jacky Tsui, a 37-year-old factory worker. “I hope the government can see that we citizens oppose this.”

 ?? —AP ?? People hold a pig model with “I am a ractopamin­e pig” written on it during a protest in Taipei, on Sunday.
—AP People hold a pig model with “I am a ractopamin­e pig” written on it during a protest in Taipei, on Sunday.

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