HomeNewsAustralia news live: Wilkie questions whether diseased salmon is...

Australia news live: Wilkie questions whether diseased salmon is being sold to the public; supermarket duopoly ‘effectively’ allows collusion, senator claims | Australia news

Wilkie calls for independent inquiry into salmon industry after deadly outbreak

Adam Morton

Tasmanian MP Andrew Wilkie has called for an independent inquiry into whether the state’s aquaculture companies are selling diseased salmon to the public after a bacterium outbreak caused a mass mortality event at fish farms south of Hobart.

Wilkie, the MP for Clark, and Peter George, an independent candidate in the neighbouring seat of Franklin and anti-salmon farm campaigner, held a press conference outside the Tasmanian parliament.

They said that while politicians and the industry had claimed that diseased fish were not sold for human consumption, a 2014 policy document from the salmon company Huon showed that staff were advised that “in any large mortality event, as many fish as possible should be recovered for harvest and processing”. It said “any fish in which the gills still bleed is potentially recoverable”.

Wilkie and George said this was at odds with claims by the salmon industry and the Tasmanian Liberal industry minister Eric Abetz that dying and dead fish were not harvested and sold to the public.

Independent MP Andrew Wilkie
Seeking inquiry: independent MP Andrew Wilkie. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

Wilkie accused the state government of “running a protection racket for the salmon industry and in the process risking destroying the industry”. He said there would be “increasing pushback from consumers” if the government did not act.

A lot of consumers want to eat salmon, they like salmon, but they want to know it’s healthy. At the moment, they have no confidence it’s healthy. I certainly won’t be buying any more salmon until I can have some confidence it’s healthy and sustainably produced.

Huon and Abetz have been asked for their response.

Share

Updated at 

Key events

Hanson-Young responds to US tech giants push for Trump to hit Australia on social media laws

Earlier, we reported that tech giants are pressuring US president Donald Trump to punish Australia over its social media laws.

The Greens’ spokesperson for communications, Sarah Hanson-Young, issued a statement in response, stating that Trump is “not our president and Australians won’t be bullied by [his] tech oligarchs.”

Streamers like Netflix, Amazon and Disney make mega profits of Australian subscribers without any regulation or requirement to invest in the local industry and Australian storytelling.

As a sovereign and independent country, Australia has the right to make laws that represent our values as a fair society and protect our citizens online. We will not allow tech billionaires to undermine measures that keep our communities safe and cohesive.

Hanson-Young said Australia was “getting almost daily examples to show that in the Trump era our relationship with the US has fundamentally changed and it is time for [us] to chart a course for ourselves independent of the US.”

Greens senator Sarah Hanson-Young. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP
Share

Source link

- Advertisement -

Worldwide News, Local News in London, Tips & Tricks