Mainland Chinese officials said on Wednesday they would immediately resume imports of two types of Taiwanese fish that have been banned since August in the latest thaw in cross-strait economic ties.
The General Administration of Customs will once again allow shipments of chilled white hairtail and frozen horse mackerel, according to a post on the Weibo page of the Chinese government's Taiwan Affairs Office.
Both were banned in August after mainland China said they had found traces of coronavirus on packaging.
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"In order to promote the healthy development of cross-strait trade, the General Administration of Customs has decided to resume the import of chilled white hairtail and frozen horse mackerel from Taiwan," the Taiwan Affairs Office said.
It will also halt testing fish imports for coronavirus, said the administrative agency that sits under China's State Council.
A Taiwan Food and Drug Administration spokesman, who did not want to be named as he is not authorised to speak on record to the media, confirmed the bans had been lifted.
The bans last year coincided with a visit to Taiwan by US former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, which outraged Beijing and sparked days of military exercises near the self-ruled island.
Beijing views self-ruled Taiwan as part of China to be unified, by force if necessary. Countries that have diplomatic ties with Beijing, including the United States, acknowledge the existence of the one-China principle, which states Taiwan is part of China. But they may not explicitly agree with it.
Washington does not take a position on the status of Taiwan, though it opposes any attempt to take the island by force.
Mainland Chinese officials have sought to deliver an olive branch to the Taiwanese public by repairing bilateral trade ties before Taiwan's presidential election in January, which could install a leader who either favours easing cross-strait tensions or continues to add uncertainty to the region, analysts said.
"I see [the lifting of the ban] as an overall game plan to increase economic relations and people-to-people relations between mainland and Taiwan," said Joanna Lei, CEO of the Chunghua 21st Century think tank in Taiwan.
Mainland Chinese officials have worked with their Taiwanese counterparts since December to reopen ferry routes and direct flights that have been halted since the early days of the coronavirus pandemic.