Norway's salmon rot as China takes revenge for dissident's Nobel Prize 
By Mark Lewis UK Source: independent 10/23/2011
Mark Lewis
Norway has reported China to the World Trade Organisation (WTO) in an escalation of a row about fish which has pitted one of Europe's smallest countries against the biggest nation in the world.

The Chinese imposed additional import controls on Norwegian salmon last year in apparent retribution for the Nobel Peace Prize awarded in Oslo to the Chinese dissident, Liu Xiaobo. The result has been a collapse in sales of salmon to China, and the sight and smell of North Sea fish rotting in Chinese warehouses. The Norwegian Foreign Office said overall trade with China had grown by 46 per cent over the past six months. But sales of fresh salmon, meanwhile, have collapsed 61.8 per cent.
 

Officials said they would not speculate as to why Beijing had ignored trade rules relating to Norwegian salmon. But it seems clear that the threat from the Chinese embassy in Oslo last year, of "damage" to diplomatic ties should the Nobel Prize be handed to "a criminal" has focused on a narrow, iconic target.

The Foreign Office said it was in talks with the WTO about how to proceed against China. "Norway believes the measures put in place by China are in conflict with international trade rules, and we have raised the issue in the WTO," said a spokesman. "We are now in a dialogue with Chinese authorities to resolve the issue, and we will continue to monitor the situation."

 
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