On Nov. 14, thousands of Taiwanese took to the streets of Taipei to express their growing concern at the present administration's continued mismanagement of the nation’s international affairs. In line with this, the legislature has been deadlocked on an amendment to the Act Governing Food Sanitation (食品衛生法). At issue, of course, was the recent agreement by President Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) government to ease restrictions on US beef imports.
Don’t misunderstand this. It is not that Taiwanese do not like US prime rib,  T-bones or filet mignon; they love them. What Taiwanese are upset about is the  slipshod manner of negotiations and apparent deal-making that the Ma government  is trying to present as a fait accompli. 
What was the agreement and what  was the presumed deal? Back on Nov. 2, the agreement was this: Ma’s government,  with little advance warning, lifted its ban on US bone-in beef and other beef  products, including offal and ground beef. These items present a clear and  present danger for the people of Taiwan and yet that’s where the Ma government  has been cavalier in its attitude toward public safety. 
Ma blatantly has  tried to dodge the issue by in effect professing, “I am letting in poisoned  products, but don’t be alarmed I am not forcing you to buy and eat them.” Then  why let them in to begin with?
Here then is the second part. What is the  presumed deal? Why, with so little discussion or consultation of the legislature  and the public, was this made and announced as a done deal? What was to be  gained by letting in such potential dangers? Where is the pay-off that Ma wanted  and needed?
Ma has asked legislators not to reject this deal or amend the  law because it would risk the nation’s credibility. The issue, however, is not  the nation’s credibility, but the credibility of the Ma government in making  ill-advised deals with little thought for public health. 
In effect, Ma  is asking the people to save his face by saying, “My people goofed up and were  caught. But please don’t embarrass us in front of the world and the US by asking  us to go back to the bargaining table. We will look bad.”
Look bad? Of  course they will. Ma’s people looking bad has been the story of this government  since it took office. Incompetence and an autocratic attitude of trying to  squelch any questioning of its performance has been the order of the  day.
The issues, problems and opposition are bigger than US beef. Further  dangers loom. The Ma’s government has already signed a financial memorandum of  understanding with China, again with little serious discussion. Now, worse  still, a blind, non-transparent, economic cooperation framework agreement (ECFA)  with China is coming up, a deal that could damage Taiwan’s industries and  agricultural sector and weaken the nation’s sovereignty. 
Who will be  making the profit on these deals as well? The people of Taiwan have good reason  to be worried. 
Jerome Keating is a writer based in Taipei.
Source: Taipei Times - Editorials 2009/11/27
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