56th ASEAN foreign ministers' meeting will be held from July 11-14 in Jakarta
11/07/2023 Tuesday
AA
China has urged member countries of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to oppose Japan's planned release of treated radioactive water from the disaster-hit Fukushima nuclear plant.
Beijing has called for the chair statement of the 56th ASEAN Foreign Ministers' Meeting which begins Tuesday in the Indonesian capital Jakarta to express opposition to Japan's planned release, Tokyo-based Kyodo News reported Monday, citing an unnamed diplomatic source.
At working-level consultations, Beijing has also asked Indonesia, the current chair of the grouping, to avoid using the term “treated water” in the joint statement to be issued on Friday following the annual security huddle.
Dismissing China's stance, Japan said the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) concluded in a report released last Tuesday that Tokyo's plan "aligns with global safety standards and would have a negligible radiological impact on people and the environment."
Neighboring South Korea has said it respects the outcome of the IAEA's review, while China has criticized the UN nuclear watchdog, urging Tokyo not to carry out the planned release.
Japan's government and Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings Inc., the operator of the Fukushima plant, aim to begin releasing the water into the sea around the summer after it undergoes processing to remove most of the radionuclides except tritium.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin on Friday hinted at expanding Beijing's import controls on Japanese food, contending that Tokyo has used the pseudo-scientific term "treated water to downplay the risks of the "nuclear-contaminated water."
IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi is visiting Japan's neighbors to defend the nuclear watchdog's report on Tokyo's plans to release nuclear waste into the sea.
The report was submitted to Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida last week. It said, however, that the IAEA neither recommends nor endorses the national decision of Japan to release the treated water.
Japan’s water discharge plan, announced in April 2021, has faced significant criticism from China, South Korea, North Korea and Taiwan, along with international organizations, including the UN.
The US supported the proposal following years of discussions on dealing with over 1 million tons of water stored at the Fukushima nuclear complex since the 2011 disaster.
On March 11, 2011, a nuclear accident occurred at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant in Okuma, Fukushima, Japan. The proximate cause of the disaster was the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami.
HK planning wide sea products ban over Fukushima: CE
2023-07-11
Chief Executive John Lee says the government will ban aquatic products from "a large number of prefectures" of Japan if Tokyo goes ahead with a plan to release wastewater from the Fukushima nuclear plant that was crippled by a tsunami in 2011.
Speaking to reporters before the weekly Executive Council meeting, Lee said he takes food safety and public health concerns seriously, adding that the action Japan is planning would be unprecedented and could lead to unknown risks.
The chief executive said he has instructed Environment and Ecology Secretary Tse Chin-wan to work out plans with various government departments, under the supervision of Chief Secretary Eric Chan, for a response to a discharge of wastewater.
Lee said he believes that Hong Kong's catering industry would understand the reason behind any restrictions imposed.
"I'm sure they will know food safety is important, and they will know public confidence in food safety is so important that it will affect the whole catering sector if we don't handle it in a way that the citizens will feel safe."
The chief executive added that Tse would make an announcement as soon as possible once an action plan has been formulated.
Speaking to reporters before the weekly Executive Council meeting, Lee said he takes food safety and public health concerns seriously, adding that the action Japan is planning would be unprecedented and could lead to unknown risks.
The chief executive said he has instructed Environment and Ecology Secretary Tse Chin-wan to work out plans with various government departments, under the supervision of Chief Secretary Eric Chan, for a response to a discharge of wastewater.
Lee said he believes that Hong Kong's catering industry would understand the reason behind any restrictions imposed.
"I'm sure they will know food safety is important, and they will know public confidence in food safety is so important that it will affect the whole catering sector if we don't handle it in a way that the citizens will feel safe."
The chief executive added that Tse would make an announcement as soon as possible once an action plan has been formulated.
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