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 US trade 
undersecretary postpones visit 
 
RACTOPAMINE: The AIT did not address any 
possible connection between the change in plan and domestic opposition to the 
import of US beef containing the feed additive 
 
By Shih Hsiu-chuan / Staff Reporter 
 
The American Institute in Taiwan (AIT) yesterday announced that a visit to 
Taipei by US Undersecretary of Commerce for International Trade Francisco 
Sanchez had been postponed, amid an ongoing controversy over the import of US 
beef containing ractopamine. 
 
Taiwan was initially one of the stops on Sanchezˇ¦s one-week tour of Asia to 
promote US exports and strengthen economic ties across the Asia-Pacific region. 
 
ˇ§Unforeseen circumstances have made it necessary to postpone the planned March 
4-6 visit,ˇ¨ the AIT said in a press release. 
 
ˇ§We are currently considering options for a future visit by the Under Secretary. 
The United States looks forward to continued cooperation on economic and trade 
relations with Taiwan, our 10th largest trading partner,ˇ¨ it said. 
 
Sanchez was in Tokyo yesterday on a planned three-day visit and he is scheduled 
to conclude his trip in Asia in Hanoi, Vietnam, on Wednesday next week. 
 
The AIT did not say whether Sanchez was flying back to the US or traveling to 
other countries. 
 
AIT spokesperson Sheila Paskman did not elaborate on ˇ§unforeseen circumstancesˇ¨ 
when contacted for clarification. 
 
ˇ§[Sanchezˇ¦s] office contacted us and said that he has something unusual come up 
and he has to postpone the trip, and they are looking at other dates,ˇ¨ Paskman 
said. 
 
The news of Sanchezˇ¦s visit was made public on Wednesday last week. 
 
Soon after that, the Republic of China Swine Association, a nationwide 
association of pig farmers, announced that hog raisers would stage protests 
during Sanchezˇ¦s visit to voice their opposition to any move to lift the ban on 
imports of US beef containing ractopamine. 
 
By law, applications for public protests must be submitted at least seven days 
before the event. As such, the association had rescheduled the date of its 
protest to Thursday next week. 
 
ˇ§Although [Sanchez] canceled the trip, the protest will be held as scheduled. We 
have to show the US that we oppose the use of ractopamine,ˇ¨ association 
director-general Yang Guan-chang (·¨«ałą) said by telephone. 
 
The AIT did not address any possible connection between the canceled visit and 
the ongoing controversy over ractopamine. 
 
The AIT yesterday also released a communique on ractopamine ˇX the second in two 
weeks ˇX to ˇ§provide more facts about US beef and ractopamine.ˇ¨ 
 
ˇ§There have been a lot of kind of crazy articles going around. We do feel 
strongly that people need to do some research and find out what the real science 
is about the beef. We are not trying to sell anything to Taiwan we do not eat 
ourselves,ˇ¨ Paskman said when asked about the statements. 
 
ˇ§There is no health issue. I am absolutely confident that there is no health 
risk for US beef. I just hope that [people in Taiwan] will think about the 
serious science and not get carried away by political concerns,ˇ¨ she said. 
 
In the statement, the AIT said that ˇ§a person would need to eat more than 270 
kilograms of beef or more than nine kilograms of beef liver every day to reach 
that maximum safe level.ˇ¨ 
 
ˇ§Over the past ten years, millions of people in more than 100 countries around 
the world have consumed billions of kilograms of US beef with no reports of any 
illness or other effect linked to ractopamine. This is strong evidence that US 
beef and ractopamine are safe,ˇ¨ it said. 
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