SCARBOROUGH ... LA CAVENDISH EN SOUFFRE !
Même
la banane philippine en souffre
Le
vendredi 11 mai, les autorités chinoises refusaient toujours l’entrée de
quelques 1.500 containers de bananes ‘’Cavendish’’ en provenance de Mindanao.
Chinese authorities on Friday continued to refuse entry to some 1,500
containers containing Cavendish banana because of an alleged finding that
fruits earlier sent by Mindanao banana growers there showed signs of disease found
only in coconuts.
Stephen Antig, president of the Pilipino Banana Growers and Exporters
Association—which groups 18 companies in Mindanao—said that as of 3 p.m.
Thursday, the bananas were being left to rot at the ports of Dalian, Shanghai,
and Xingang as Chinese authorities insisted on the country’s new phytosanitary
rules for bananas arriving from the Philippines.
“Mindanao exporters feel we are being harassed,” Antig said, adding that
it could be related to the standoff between the Philippines and China at
Scarborough Shoal in the West Philippine Sea.
He said, however, that the exporters’ group did not want “to think of it
as political because we are businessmen.”
In Manila, presidential spokesperson Edwin Lacierda reiterated an
earlier statement playing down a link between the Scarborough dispute and the
new inspection rules in China for Philippine fruit exports.
Lacierda said the tighter inspections were a “technical issue” and the
regulatory agencies of the Philippines and China were dealing with it.
Antig said Chinese authorities claimed the inspection of the cargoes was
going on after they found Aspidiotus destructor in some containers inspected in
March.
That, among other issues, had triggered the stricter inspection, Antig
said, although everyone knew the Aspidiotus is found only in coconuts. Antig
said they feared that the bananas could rot.
Antig said the ports had limited power facilities and the
air-conditioned containers were left unplugged.
“The bananas are being held in the ports for inspection when in just a
matter of three days, the bananas can turn into vinegar,” he said.
P1 billion losses
Antig said banana exporters had lost some P1 billion since China started
applying the new rules in March.
“I hope this is really not political because we are in the business. We
don’t want to believe that the life of the banana industry is threatened by our
country’s problem with China,” Antig said.
Task force formed
Agriculture Secretary Proceso Alcala told the exporters that a task
force had been formed to deal with the problem. If needed, members of the task
force would accompany the shipments to monitor quarantine procedures in the
destination.
The banana exporters had scheduled a meeting in Panabo City for Friday but
canceled it, as China might misconstrue it as part of the protests in Manila
against Chinese intrusion on Scarborough Shoal.
A source from Philexport Mindanao, who asked not to be named, said the
meeting was aimed at calling the government’s attention to and asking for help
on the stricter quarantine procedures in China.
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