TheBeefSite Latest News
Cold Feet and Hot Heads in South Korea
SOUTH KOREA - Earlier today South Korea's prime minister decided to backtrack on previous words and leave the door open to revising the US beef import deal due to mounting public pressure over safety concerns.
According to the news agency Reuters, South Korean officials had previously insisted the agreement could not be renegotiated.
"We will keep watch on the negotiations between the U.S. and other countries and will at any time ask to revise the (beef) agreement if any new situation comes about," Prime Minister Han Seung-soo said at a news conference.
South Korea agreed last month to open its market wider to American beef after U.S. lawmakers said a separate, sweeping bilateral free trade deal would not make it through Congress until Seoul made concessions on beef.
On May 15, South Korea resumes quarantine inspection on all cuts of U.S. beef from animals of any age, which will start imports flowing again and lifts a blanket ban Seoul had imposed in 2003 following an outbreak of mad cow disease.
South Koreans have taken to the streets to protest as rumours have spread quickly in the world's most wired country making claims such as diapers and cosmetics posing a risk for mad cow disease because beef products are used in their production.
Further Reading
| - | Go to our previous news item on this story by clicking here. |
TheCattleSite News Desk
Latest Beef Industry News
Russia's Meat Output to Rise by Six Per Cent
Pfizer Welcomes Agreement With Elanco On Divested Assets
Feed Manual To Be Launched At Cancun Congress
Recession Is Impacting Consumer Buying Habits
Mistreatment Of Migrant And Agency Workers
National Spring Spectacular Show At Beef Expo 2010
Consider Tax Implications Of Farm Liquidation
Kansas Corn Delegation Arrives In Europe For US Burger Launch
Weekly Outlook: Month-End USDA Reports
Half A Billion Dollars Of R&D Gone?
Workshop On Competition Issues
Current E.coli Tracing Procedures Are Effective
Butchery Site Even More Cutting Edge
January Meat Exports Show Mixed Results
Weekly US Cattle Outlook: Net Beef Trade Better


