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South Korean parties file suits to stop beef

30 May 2008

South Korean parties file suits to stop beef

By JAE-SOON CHANG

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - South Korea’s political opposition asked the Constitutional Court on Friday to block U.S. beef from entering the country after the government announced it would resume imports within days under an accord with Washington.

A South Korean farmer is arrested by riot policemen during a rally against US beef imports near the presidential house in Seoul, South Korea, Friday, May 30, 2008. South Korea’s political opposition met Friday to discuss how to block US beef imports after the government announced it will push ahead with an agreement with Washington and resume imports within days. (Ahn Young-joon, AP)

The government’s announcement came despite widespread public opposition to the beef deal, which critics say fails to adequately protect against mad cow disease. About 9,000 people took to the streets in Seoul on Thursday night to denounce the move.

Three main opposition parties filed lawsuits Friday asking the Constitutional Court to rule that the government’s move violates the people’s right to health, and to issue an injunction against a resumption of imports until it issues a verdict.

They also demanded that all Cabinet members resign.

Constitutional Court spokesman Judge Kim Bok-ki said the court will deliberate the case expeditiously, but he did not give any timeframe.

Quarantine inspections of American beef shipments are expected to begin next week.

Still, U.S. beef is not expected to become widely available immediately because four major discount chains say they have no plans to put it on their shelves because of negative public perceptions of American beef.

"We cannot ignore public sentiment," said Na Geun-tae, an official with Lotte Mart, a major chain.

Separately, about two dozen members of a farmers’ association held a protest in front of the presidential Blue House demanding the government reverse its decision to resume imports. All were marched into a police bus and taken away for questioning.

American beef has been the hottest issue in South Korea for nearly a month. Hardly a day has passed without the topic making front-page headlines or protesters holding candlelit vigils and street rallies in downtown Seoul against the agreement.

The issue has also dominated politics, with opposition parties refusing to approve a broader free trade deal with the United States in protest of the beef deal.

Friday was the first working day of a new National Assembly elected April 9 to four-year term. President Lee Myung-bak’s ruling Grand National Party won a majority in the elections, but his approval ratings have dipped sharply amid anger over the beef agreement.

Protesters claim the government has ignored their worries about the safety of U.S. beef and accuse Lee of making too many concessions to Washington to win U.S. congressional approval of the free trade agreement.

The demonstrations have become a major headache for Lee, who took office just three months ago. More than 200 protesters have been arrested in recent days, although many were subsequently released.

Lee apologized last week for not sufficiently consulting the public on the beef issue, but it had little effect in calming public anger.

South Korea suspended imports after the first U.S. case of mad cow disease appeared in December 2003 in a Canadian-born cow in Washington state. Two subsequent cases were also discovered in the U.S.

Before the ban, South Korea was the third-largest overseas market for U.S. beef. A previous deal last year allowed restricted imports to reach South Korean consumers, but was quickly suspended after banned substances were found in several shipments.

Scientists believe mad cow disease, or bovine spongiform encephalopathy, spreads when farmers feed cattle recycled meat and bones from infected animals. The U.S. banned recycled feeds in 1997.

In humans, eating meat products contaminated with the cattle disease is linked to variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, a rare and fatal malady.


 source: AFP