S.Korea says to take time in allowing in U.S. beef

Sun Jun 22, 2008 10:02pm EDT
 
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By Miyoung Kim

SEOUL, June 23 (Reuters) - A South Korean official said on Monday the country would move slowly in allowing back U.S. beef imports in order to calm an angry public that has staged mass street protests for weeks against the product.

South Korea and the United States at the weekend announced they had reached a private-sector deal to restrict trade in U.S. beef to cattle under 30 months and forbid exports of other parts that are thought to pose a higher risk for mad cow disease.

"The process may take a while," a farm ministry spokesman said, adding his ministry plans to carefully examine and implement the reworked import deal.

Hours after the revised beef deal was announced, a violent protest erupted in central Seoul. Rallies started in early May against the beef deal and later mushroomed into protests against new President Lee Myung-bak, placing his government in crisis.

South Korea's trade minister, who went to Washington last week to revise the beef deal reached in April, had said the legal procedures starting the flow of U.S. meat back into what once was the third-largest overseas market for the product could start as early as this week.

President Lee's conservative Grand National Party said on Sunday that was too fast.

Internet message boards in the world's most wired country have been filled with posts by South Koreans wondering if the private-sector deal is enough to prevent material they feel poses a high risk for mad cow disease from entering the country.

While the numbers of protesters has dropped in recent weeks, and a poll taken on Friday by a major daily said 60 percent of South Koreans thought it was time to end them, analysts said a misstep by Lee could spark a new round of mass street rallies.

Lee struck the beef import deal in order to help the prospects for a sweeping trade pact with the United States that surveys said could boost two-way trade, valued at $78 billion a year, by about $20 billion.

U.S. lawmakers said Congress would not approve the trade deal, which has not been ratified in South Korea, unless Seoul fully opened its market to U.S. beef.

"Although some see the (beef) deal as unsatisfactory, we believe the result of the additional negotiations is more than we had expected," presidential spokesman Lee Dong-kwan said.

President Lee, who scored a landslide win in a December vote, last week apologised for the beef deal and started to shake-up his four-month-old government in hopes of trying to reverse a sharp drop in his public support rate.

Analysts said Lee, who vowed to be the "economy president", could not implement reforms such as privatisation of state firms and corporate tax cuts unless he can win back a public that sees him as out of touch with its concerns. (Editing by Jon Herskovitz and Jeremy Laurence)



 

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