"56+0", the truth of Taiwan's pineapple piercing (weiyan)

  Due to multiple detections of harmful organisms, the mainland has suspended imports of Taiwanese pineapples since March 1.

This has been maliciously hyped by the green camp media in Taiwan, and many truths have been exposed.

  It is the usual practice of the DPP authorities to politicize any mainland China. There was a new crown vaccine before and Taiwan pineapples afterwards.

This time the DPP repeated its old trick, claiming that Taiwanese pineapples were suppressed by the mainland.

But there are always places where lies cannot be held. As the incident develops, many secrets that the DPP is unwilling to tell have been revealed.

For example, the Democratic Progressive Party has been boasting about how to promote Taiwan's agricultural products. The results show that the largest export market for Taiwan's fruits is the mainland. The mainland imports more than 40,000 tons of Taiwanese pineapples each year, accounting for about 10% of Taiwan's total output.

And last year, even Tsai Ing-wen's publicly praised the export of pineapples to Australia, but only 56 kg of dried pineapples were sold throughout the year. This year's figure is even "0".

  The sharper truth is that the DPP doesn’t care if there is a market for Taiwan’s agricultural products.

In the past few days, the Democratic Progressive Party has claimed that Taiwan's pineapples have been mobilized from top to bottom, and the demand for Taiwan pineapples is almost in short supply.

However, people of insight soon discovered that the detection of pests was a technical problem that could be solved, but it was manipulated by the DPP into an unsolvable political problem. The DPP did not want to help Taiwan pineapples return to the mainland market, and not only did not fix it. The bridge also ruined the road.

Fresh fruits are limited in transportation time and can only be sold nearby. Taiwanese fruits are sold to the mainland on an objective basis.

After ruining the road to the mainland market, Taiwan’s pineapple sales have become more problematic. Putting a political label on the pineapple will only hurt the vital interests of Taiwan’s fruit farmers.

  Yu Jie