Alleged retaliation by China causes Taiwan’s fishing community to suffer
Beijing extended its ban on Taiwan’s seafood a day after Nancy Pelosi's arrival
11 August 2022 - 10:57
byAnn Wang and I-Hwa Cheng
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Taiwanese Navy warships anchored in Keelung, Taiwan, August 7 2022. Picture: ANNABELLE CHIH/GETTY IMAGES
Pingtung — Even before last week’s visit to Taiwan by US House of Representatives speaker Nancy Pelosi, fish farmer Chen Sheng-You was on the lookout for new business, with trade curbs cutting him off from his major source of revenue — China.
Amid simmering tension between China and self-ruled Taiwan, Beijing suspended purchases of grouper fish, Chen’s main product, in June after repeatedly detecting banned chemicals.
But the geopolitical storm that followed Pelosi’s visit on August 2 is likely to put the livelihoods of Chen and other farmers and fishers in the island’s southern Pingtung county at further risk.
“Our job is to do fish farming,” Chen told Reuters. “We only hope that once the fish grow bigger, we will sell them.”
“Because of political issues and our government not having a communication channel, the Chinese government is blocking our economy,” he said.
Beijing extended its ban on Taiwan’s seafood a day after Pelosi's arrival, blocking shipments of chilled white striped hairtail and frozen horse mackerel, saying it had found traces of the coronavirus on the packaging of some products.
The bans were widely seen as retaliation against Taiwan for allowing the visit, which prompted China to launch unprecedented military exercises around the island. China described Pelosi’s visit as a provocation that undermines its sovereignty and territorial integrity.
Taiwan rejects China’s sovereignty claims and says only its 23.5-million people can decide their future.
“I personally don’t think it helped Taiwan whatsoever,” Chen said of Pelosi’s visit. “It creates some economic loss for the Taiwanese people instead. I don’t know why she came.”
China also banned imports of sand — used to make concrete — and suspended shipments from 35 Taiwanese exporters of biscuits and pastries.
In the first half of 2022, China’s imports from Taiwan reached a value of $122.5bn, up 7.3% from a year earlier, Chinese customs data showed. Taiwan’s sales of fish and aquatic invertebrates to China amounted to 399-million yuan ($59m).
According to Goldman Sachs, food exports to China accounted for just 0.4% of China-bound Taiwan exports, which are dominated by hi-tech products, and sanctions have mostly affected farmers and fishermen.
Taiwan’s fishers have been looking for other options. Zheng Rui-Long, the owner of a fish processing factory in Pingtung, told Reuters he was trying to supply fish for bento boxes for Taiwan’s railway network.
“Fishermen here indeed are worried that they don’t know where to sell groupers,” he said.
“People need to live. We don’t understand too much about politics but we only need a kind and peaceful relationship between China and Taiwan and also to coexist.”
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Alleged retaliation by China causes Taiwan’s fishing community to suffer
Beijing extended its ban on Taiwan’s seafood a day after Nancy Pelosi's arrival
Pingtung — Even before last week’s visit to Taiwan by US House of Representatives speaker Nancy Pelosi, fish farmer Chen Sheng-You was on the lookout for new business, with trade curbs cutting him off from his major source of revenue — China.
Amid simmering tension between China and self-ruled Taiwan, Beijing suspended purchases of grouper fish, Chen’s main product, in June after repeatedly detecting banned chemicals.
But the geopolitical storm that followed Pelosi’s visit on August 2 is likely to put the livelihoods of Chen and other farmers and fishers in the island’s southern Pingtung county at further risk.
“Our job is to do fish farming,” Chen told Reuters. “We only hope that once the fish grow bigger, we will sell them.”
“Because of political issues and our government not having a communication channel, the Chinese government is blocking our economy,” he said.
Beijing extended its ban on Taiwan’s seafood a day after Pelosi's arrival, blocking shipments of chilled white striped hairtail and frozen horse mackerel, saying it had found traces of the coronavirus on the packaging of some products.
The bans were widely seen as retaliation against Taiwan for allowing the visit, which prompted China to launch unprecedented military exercises around the island. China described Pelosi’s visit as a provocation that undermines its sovereignty and territorial integrity.
Taiwan rejects China’s sovereignty claims and says only its 23.5-million people can decide their future.
“I personally don’t think it helped Taiwan whatsoever,” Chen said of Pelosi’s visit. “It creates some economic loss for the Taiwanese people instead. I don’t know why she came.”
China also banned imports of sand — used to make concrete — and suspended shipments from 35 Taiwanese exporters of biscuits and pastries.
In the first half of 2022, China’s imports from Taiwan reached a value of $122.5bn, up 7.3% from a year earlier, Chinese customs data showed. Taiwan’s sales of fish and aquatic invertebrates to China amounted to 399-million yuan ($59m).
According to Goldman Sachs, food exports to China accounted for just 0.4% of China-bound Taiwan exports, which are dominated by hi-tech products, and sanctions have mostly affected farmers and fishermen.
Taiwan’s fishers have been looking for other options. Zheng Rui-Long, the owner of a fish processing factory in Pingtung, told Reuters he was trying to supply fish for bento boxes for Taiwan’s railway network.
“Fishermen here indeed are worried that they don’t know where to sell groupers,” he said.
“People need to live. We don’t understand too much about politics but we only need a kind and peaceful relationship between China and Taiwan and also to coexist.”
Reuters
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