Taiwan threatens to take China to WTO in new spat over fruit

Published 2021년 9월 20일

Tridge summary

Taiwan is preparing to take China to the World Trade Organization following China's decision to suspend imports of sugar apples and wax apples due to the detection of pests. Taiwan's Council of Agriculture has refuted the claims, asserting that China has not provided sufficient evidence and accusing it of unilateral action. Taiwan has given China a deadline of September 30 to resolve the issue amicably before initiating action at the WTO.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Taiwan threatened to take China to the World Trade Organization on Sunday after Beijing said it would suspend sugar apple and wax apple imports from the island on pest concerns, in the latest spat between the two over fruit, Reuters reports. Relations between Taipei and Beijing, which claims democratically ruled Taiwan as its own territory, are at their lowest in decades, with China increasing political and military pressure to get the island to accept its sovereignty. China's customs administration said it had repeatedly detected pests called "Planococcus minor" in sugar apples, also known as sweetsops or custard apples, and wax apples from Taiwan. It asked its Guangdong branch and all directly affiliated offices to stop customs clearance of those products from Monday. Taiwan's Council of Agriculture Minister Chen Chi-chung said China had behaved unilaterally without providing scientific evidence, and criticised the announcement for coming during the traditional Mid-Autumn ...

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