TAIPEI - The government and local hotels
have stepped up their efforts to ban shark finning amid a global movement to
oppose the practice - in which fishermen cut the fins off sharks and then throw
the animals back into the sea to die.
The Fisheries Agency implemented a regulation
earlier this week that will force fishermen to keep shark catches intact until
they arrive in port, a rule the agency hopes will prevent fishing vessels from
making space to store more fins and end the cruel practice.
By being the first country in Asia to impose
such a restriction, Taiwan showed its resolution to promote sustainable
fishing, the agency said.
"We have to start with the supply chain -
the fishermen - in impression on them the significance of the law so the
chances of violations can be reduced," said Fisheries Agency Deputy
Director-General Tsay Tzu-yaw.
Likewise, local hotels such as W Taipei, The
Westin Taipei, the Silks Palace at National Palace Museum, and Shangri-La's Far
Eastern Plaza Hotel in Taipei and Tainan, also pledged to strike shark fin
dishes off their menus.
While the hotels would oblige if customers
asked for shark fin dishes at their wedding banquets, the latest commitment
means a complete ban of the ingredient, hotel operators said.
"We will suggest other same-level
delicacies - such as silky fowl and abalone - for our customers," said
Tricia Chen, assistant communications manager of Shangri-La's Far Eastern Plaza
Hotel, Taipei.
The commitment makes sense, said Shih
Chien-fa, a chef better known as Taiwan's "God of Cooking."
"It's the cooking skills of the chef, not
the shark fin, that makes the dish delicious," said Shih, who stopped
offering shark fin in his own restaurant three years ago.
The move by local hotels came after The
Peninsula Hotel in Hong Kong announced a chain-wide ban last November.
Chen Yu-min, director of the Environment &
Animal Society of Taiwan, said both the government's and hospitality industry's
efforts were praiseworthy.
"Their actions help define what kind of
country Taiwan is," Chen said. "It is very nice of them to launch the
policies just before the Lunar New Year, when the consumption of shark fin
could rise tremendously."
According to a Pew Environment Group report
last year, Taiwan has accounted for 5.8 per cent of the world's shark catch,
mostly to provide shark fin for wedding banquets.
The China Post/Asia News Network
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