Jakarta Globe – AFP, December 16, 2013
China
announced a ban on the serving of shark fin and bird’s nest soup at official
banquets Sunday, as part of a sweeping government crackdown on corruption and
excessive spending.
Shark fin
has effectively been off the menu at official dining tables since 2012 when
Beijing pledged to bar the popular yet controversial delicacy as part of its
anti-extravagance campaign.
Demand for
shark fin has plummeted after many high-end hotels and restaurants stopped
serving the dish, along with other expensive delicacies favoured by Communist
Party officials such as abalone and bird’s nest soup.
An order
from the Communist Party Central Committee and the State Council “explicitly
ruled out dishes containing shark fins, bird nests and wild animal products in
official reception dinners,” the official Xinhua news agency reported Sunday.
“Officials
on business tours should arrange their own meals according to relevant
expenditure standards and the local hosts are allowed to provide only one
reception dinner if needed,” it said, citing the regulation.
The
detailed document also bars expensive liquors and cigarettes from being offered
at local authority receptions, as it aims to “regulate” spending on receptions
given by local authorities for visiting party or government officials, Xinhua
said.
Officials
below provincial level are also banned from renting hotel suites on business
trips, while local hosts are forbidden to give them cash, securities or
souvenirs as gifts.
Chinese
officials have long held lavish liquor-drenched receptions as a way of building
business relationships, greasing the wheels of power, and showing off wealth
and status.
The new
rules are intended “to promote frugality, oppose extravagance and enhance the
anti-corruption efforts among party and governmental authorities,” Xinhua said.
Xi Jinping,
who took office as president in March after becoming Communist Party chief in
November 2012, has vowed to crack down on corruption at all levels of government,
calling it a threat to the future of the ruling party.
State media
said last month that nearly 17,000 people have been punished for flouting the
party’s “frugality” guidelines.
Offences
included violating a “ban on government building projects, excessive spending
on receptions, use of government vehicles for private purposes, unnecessary
trips in China and abroad, using public money, as well as excessively large
wedding banquets,” Xinhua said at the time.
Shark-fin
soup was once a luxury enjoyed by China’s elite, but shark populations have
been decimated around the world as the country’s 1.3 billion people have grown
wealthier and incorporated it into their festivities.
Hong Kong’s
government said in September it would stop serving shark fin at official
functions as “a good example,” following years of lobbying by conservation
groups.
Companies
including the Shangri-La hotel group and Cathay Pacific have also moved to stop
serving or carrying shark fin.

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