| 7 June | ||
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1990: Three countries lift beef export ban France, West Germany and Italy have lifted a ban on British beef-on-the-bone after reaching a deal in Brussels.
A potential European Community crisis was averted when the principle of fair trade was upheld thanks to the deal reached in a 20-hour meeting. The deal means beef-on-the-bone can now be exported from any BSE-free farm in Britain and all de-boned beef must carry an export certificate declaring it free from meat from potentially infectious cattle. Beef from any farm can still be traded in Britain. The ban on exports was imposed in May as a response to fears over bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) or "mad cow" disease.
Henri Nallet, the French Agriculture Minister, said he was happy with the outcome. "I am satisfied with the meeting because the council has recognised the French position and since yesterday I've been able to establish that many other member states support our decision" he said. But Shadow Agriculture Minister David Clarke criticised the government saying allowing beef not fit for export to be sold in this country would harm consumer confidence in an already hard-hit industry. He also criticised Mr Gummer saying he had "not even started tackling the fundamental problem of eradicating BSE from our cattle". The National Farmers Union also took issue with the deal. Their President, Sir Simon Gourlay said farmers whose herds had been infected with BSE would "become second class citizens of the beef industry". |
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