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Japan eyes end to US mad-cow ban, S.Korea baulks

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    Japan eyes end to US mad-cow ban, S.Korea baulks

    Japan is showing an appetite to
    lift a months-long ban on U.S. beef following the discovery of
    mad-cow disease in American herds but number two Asian customer
    South Korea is still baulking, officials said on Thursday.
    A senior health official in Taiwan, the sixth biggest market
    for U.S. beef, also expressed confidence its suspension can be
    lifted, saying objections by a panel of medical experts would be
    disregarded unless they could prove U.S. meat is dangerous.
    But the main focus is on Japan, which accounts for some $1.4
    billion in U.S. beef imports every year, making it by far the
    biggest consumer.
    All three Asian markets banned imports in December after the
    United States reported its first case of bovine spongiform
    encephalopathy (BSE), commonly known as mad cow.
    A top food safety body in Japan has approved a report
    recommending an end to testing on all cattle for mad cow, the
    main point of contention between Washington and Tokyo in talks
    to ease the ban.
    Excluding young cattle from tests for the disease would not
    raise the risk of Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease, a human form of mad
    cow, if material at high risk of carrying the disease is removed
    from cattle slaughtered for food, the Japanese report said.
    "In reviewing Japan's BSE policy, it should be fully taken
    into account that cattle younger than 20 months could not be
    confirmed as having BSE, out of total test results covering
    about 3.5 million animals," the report said.
    Japan's Food Safety Commission has acknowledged that current
    tests are not sophisticated enough to catch traces of BSE in
    young cattle due to the disease's long incubation period.
    It will submit the report to the Agriculture and the Health,
    Labour and Welfare Ministries for a decision on whether to drop
    blanket testing.

    SOUTH KOREA UNDER PRESSURE
    South Korea is less likely to lift its ban soon as the
    country does not want to spoil its clean record on the
    brain-wasting disease and is seeking to diversify its sources of
    beef, officials said.
    However, pressure is on Seoul to lift the ban as the U.S.
    links the ban to rice quota talks.
    "We will discuss with the United States whether we resume
    the beef imports, if Japan lifts its ban on the U.S. beef," said
    Kim Chang-seob at the agriculture ministry's animal health
    division.
    "It is difficult to say what would be the result of the
    talks, because Korea and Japan are different," the chief
    veterinary officer said.
    Since May, Seoul has been in talks with the United States
    and other rice-exporting countries over whether to extend its
    current quotas or switch to a new tariff system next year.
    The United States has asked Seoul to lift the beef import
    ban and then it will agree to extend the rice quota.

    EVIDENCE FOR TAIWAN KEY
    In Taiwan, only two or three of a 17-member panel
    deliberating whether to re-open its market -- the sixth-largest
    for U.S. beef with sales of $70.6 million in 2003 -- now oppose
    the move, said the chairman of the panel.
    "They should have some scientific reasons" for their
    objections to lifting the ban," said Chen Lu-hung, a senior
    official from the Department of Health.
    Chen said some members of the panel, which includes doctors,
    veterinarians and pathologists, had quoted unverified website
    reports concerning the dangers of U.S. beef instead of
    documented scientific research.
    If the ban is lifted, the Taiwan government may impose
    conditions on U.S. beef, such as only importing meat from cattle
    under 30 months of age, which carry a smaller risk of
    contracting mad cow, said Chen.

    #2
    Here's another one

    TOKYO — Japan moved a step forward toward Thursday resuming U.S. beef imports as the government's food safety agency softened its stance on blanket testing for mad cow disease.

    The Cabinet Office's Food Safety Commission endorsed a recommendation put forward by a panel of experts Monday that referred to the difficulty of detecting bovine spongiform encephalopathy in cows aged 20 months or younger using the current testing method. (Kyodo News)

    Comment


      #3
      Notice the way the Americans tied the beef issue to rice?

      That's how it's done in the good ol' US of A. Nothing without strings attached.

      Comment


        #4
        Kato: You are right. I wish we could tie live cattle exports to oil and gas. We give away all our bargaining power and are amazed when the Americans don't play nice with us.

        Comment


          #5
          Yes, sure would be nice to be able to tie in gas and oil... Our Wonderful friend, Mr. Cretien, kindly gave that chip away for us under NAFTA. Not sure of the exact wording, but we have to maintain our exports and (projected increase in exports) regardless of our production capacity. Wonderful gift from the liberals, there. And we thought the NEP was ****.

          "Don't bother to read the damn agreement, Uncle Jean, just sign where the Americans put the little red arrow."

          Comment

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