Another ban on Brazilian meat imposed by Chile sparked fears of a trade spat between the two South American partners.
A charm offensive by President Michel Temer, who even invited foreign ambassadors to a traditional meat restaurant in the capital Brasilia late Sunday, failed to calm importers.
China, which with Hong Kong is Brazil's biggest meat export market, said yesterday it needed to know more about the allegations that major meatpacking businesses bribed inspectors to get health certificates and masked tainted meat as fit for consumption.
Brazilian Agriculture Minister Blairo Maggi was to hold a videoconference late Monday with Chinese authorities to offer "clarifications".
"We expect more than 30 countries to question Brazil about this issue," Maggi told a news conference.
If all of them halt imports of Brazilian meat, it will be catastrophic for the country, the minister said.
The European Commission, the EU executive arm, called on Brazil to immediately halt exports by four companies implicated in the scandal, the bloc's spokesman Enrico Brivio told reporters in Brussels.
But after Chile announced a "temporary" ban on Brazilian meat products, Maggi angrily threatened reprisals.
"We are major importers of Chilean products: fish, fruit and other products, and Brazilians demand that we should erect barriers. Trade is like that," Maggi said.
Tensions escalated between the two countries late yesterday, when Furche said Chile will not act "according to threats" and reiterated his request for official information regarding the scandal.
South Korea, for its part, lifted a temporary suspension on the distribution of chicken already imported from Brazil, after authorities there performed quality inspections and confirmed that no tainted poultry had entered the country.
Japan, another of the industry's principal markets, said it was considering issuing a notice to customers.
At least 30 people have been arrested in the scandal, with Brazilian police raiding more than a dozen processing plants.
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