
Audio By Carbonatix
Taiwan's opposition legislators have thrown pig guts and exchanged blows in parliament amid a heated row over the easing of US pork imports.
They say a recent government decision to allow the import of US pork containing ractopamine - an additive banned for pig use in Taiwan and the European Union - is a health threat.
The ruling party denies the charge and called for a return to rational debate.
It is not uncommon for brawls to erupt in Taiwan's parliament.
Lawmakers from Taiwan's main opposition Kuomintang (KMT) party hurled buckets of pig intestines towards Premier Su Tseng-chang on Friday to stop him from taking questions in parliament.
Some also exchanged blows in a "short but vicious" encounter between KMT legislators and Chen Po-wei from the small Taiwan Statebuilding Party, reported Reuters news agency.
It said the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) condemned the "disgusting" protest, calling it a waste of food that "stank up" parliament as they urged a return to rational debate.

Washington has welcomed the August decision by Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen to ease US pork imports from 1 January.
But the move has galvanised the opposition, which has tapped into public concerns over food safety after a series of recent scandals.
Last weekend in the annual "Autumn Struggle" demonstrations, protesters held aloft a giant inflatable pig in opposition to the imports.
The additive ractopamine is currently banned for pig use in Taiwan, as well as in China and the European Union, due to concerns about safety for animals and humans.
Taiwan has become somewhat notorious for fights breaking out on the parliamentary floor.
The Legislative Yuan - or parliament - has seen punching, hair pulling, and the throwing of plastic bottles and water balloons over the years.
In one particularly heated fight in July 2017, legislators lifted up and threw chairs at each other as they argued over an infrastructure spending bill.
Latest Stories
-
IMF urges Central Banks to keep inflation in check
7 minutes -
H. Kwasi Prempeh raises concerns over Supreme Court’s handling of OSP constitutionality case
17 minutes -
Global childhood cancer cases soar
17 minutes -
Airline pilots fear retribution over refusing to fly in Middle East, aviators’ group says
18 minutes -
Police intensify security in Bosomtwe communities after deadly clash
26 minutes -
Corporate Income Tax contributes highest to 2025 petroleum revenue
28 minutes -
Ghana less exposed to global oil disruptions — Fitch
31 minutes -
Property rates: Stakeholders advocate digitisation, transparency, …
33 minutes -
Police officer killed in road crash at Atortorkorpe in Ada
33 minutes -
EKMA begins dredging major storm drains ahead of peak rainy season
37 minutes -
US has let in 4,499 refugees since October – all but three were South African
42 minutes -
Child Protection Units to be part of MMDA Performance Assessment
49 minutes -
Pub thief jailed over £2.2m Fabergé theft
55 minutes -
Show us the money – COMAC CEO demands full disclosure on ‘dumsor levy’ windfall
1 hour -
Melania Trump denies ties to Jeffrey Epstein and urges hearing for survivors
1 hour