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Japanese prime minister eats fish from radioactive wastewater dump to demonstrate safety

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida is working to raise confidence in food caught and sourced from the Fukushima region in an effort to prevent a drop-off in sales.

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and three of his cabinet ministers ate seafood sourced from the waters off the coast of Fukushima, where the country released treated radioactive wastewater from its power plants, in hopes of dismissing concerns about the quality and safety of the food.

"It is important to show safety based on scientific evidence and resolutely disseminate (the information) in and outside of Japan," Economy and Industry Minister Yasutoshi Nishimura told reporters. 

The ministers held a lunch meeting, during which they ate sashimi prepared with flounder, octopus and sea bass with rice harvested from Fukushima in an effort to dispel health concerns and to "inform people both at home and abroad" about the safety of consuming the food. 

Nishimura oversaw and consulted with experts on the plan to release the wastewater into the nearby sea. He stressed that the lunch displayed a "strong commitment to take the leadership in tackling reputational damage while standing by the feeling of the fisheries community in Fukushima."

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Officials plan to visit markets around the region over the coming week to help promote the safety of consuming the fish caught near Fukushima and restore confidence. Kishida on Thursday ate octopus caught by a Fukushima fishmonger who was selling in Tokyo as reporters watched. 

The Fukushima nuclear power plant famously malfunctioned in 2011 after an earthquake and tsunami damaged the emergency generators and caused three nuclear meltdowns and forced over 160,000 people to flee their homes. Over 18,000 people died. 

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The water from the plant has accumulated since the disaster and sat in 1,000 tanks with a capacity of 1.34 million tons. The plant now must release the water in order to free up space for additional facilities to improve the plant’s cleanup and decommissioning, which will take decades. 

Workers treated and diluted the wastewater with seawater and tested before its release, but local residents and fishermen have raised concerns about the impact the waste will have. Fishing groups worry that the release will make it hard to sell their product in other markets. 

The issue has also stirred up anger in China and South Korea: Beijing immediately banned all Japanese seafood imports after learning about the wastewater release, and South Koreans have condemned the plan. 

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Chinese residents have also started harassing Japanese citizens over the wastewater plan, forcing Japan’s Foreign Ministry to issue a travel advisory warning Japanese citizens abroad to use extra caution. 

Some protests in China have turned violent, such as when demonstrators threw stones at the Japanese embassy, consulates and schools across China. 

Japan’s Chief Cabinet Secretary, Hirokazu Matsuno, called the Chinese protests "extremely regrettable" and indicated he may raise the issue with the World Trade Organization, saying, "Japan will consider various options while continuing to work within the WTO framework to decide necessary steps." 

Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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