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Published on ShanghaiDaily.com (http://www.shanghaidaily.com/) http://www.shanghaidaily.com/sp/article/2008/200806/20080615/article_363302.htm S.Korean truckers threaten to block port, deepening president's woes Created: 2008-6-15 16:11:12 STRIKING South Korean truck drivers threatened to block the country's largest port to protest surging fuel prices, deepening the woes of the government, already reeling from public outrage over the resumption of US beef imports. About 13,000 unionized truckers are demanding the government increase fuel subsidies, help raise transportation charges and introduce a minimum wage. The stoppage immediately disrupted operations at seaports and caused millions of dollars in export losses. Yesterday, the union's local chapter in Busan, which handles 75 percent of the country's container traffic, said it was considering blocking entrances of the port within a few days if the government rejects its demands. TV footage showed docks clogged with containers piled high in Busan and other major ports. The truckers' strike has already caused US$11 million in losses to exporters and US$3 million to importers, according to the Korea International Trade Association, a private association of exporters and importers. The government dispatched military trucks and used trains to transport cargo. It also plans to send police if strikers prevent cargo from entering ports or engage in other illegal activities. The strikes are the latest headache for President Lee Myung-bak, who has faced weeks of street demonstrations over his agreement to resume American beef imports. About 12,000 protesters joined a candlelight vigil yesterday night demanding Lee renegotiate the US beef deal. Protesters chanted "Judge Lee Myung-bak!" and "The people will win!" Protests prompted by fears of mad cow disease in American beef have recently grown into broader opposition to Lee's policy agenda. In the vigil in front of Seoul City Hall, activists held placards criticizing his plans to privatize state-run corporations, build a cross-country inland waterway and strengthen English education. In Washington, the chief trade envoys of South Korea and the US launched talks Friday aimed at resolving the beef dispute, which has prompted Lee's entire Cabinet to offer to resign. Meetings between South Korean Trade Minister Kim Jong-hoon and US Trade Representative Susan Schwab were expected to continue over the weekend. South Korea was the third-largest overseas market for US beef until it banned imports after a case of mad cow disease was detected in 2003, the first of three confirmed cases in the United States. Mad cow disease is the common name for a brain-wasting disease in cattle called bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or BSE. In people, eating meat contaminated with BSE is linked to variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease, a rare and deadly nerve disease. Agencies Copyright © 2001-2009 Shanghai Daily Publishing House |