The requested article has expired, and is no longer available. Any related articles, and user comments are shown below.
© KYODOU.S. lifts post-Fukushima import restrictions on Japanese farm products
TOKYO©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.
The requested article has expired, and is no longer available. Any related articles, and user comments are shown below.
© KYODO
17 Comments
Login to comment
Pacific Saury
Glad to see that the radiation has finally dissipated.
/s
Samit Basu
This means I have to double check on the label when I buy Japanese food the next time and look for the word 福島.
Or I will just have to avoid Japanese food all together like I do with Chinese food.
garymalmgren
According to the ministry, the United States is the third-largest importer of Japanese farm and food products after Hong Kong and China.
Now, that is a surprise.
Superhero
Mushrooms? OMG, Mushrooms from east Ukrain a until today not for eat in reason of the Tschernobyl accident!
Especial mushrooms keep radioactivity long time.
Dont eat mushrooms from Fukushima area!
Hans
Fukushima is a big prefecture, and not all of it suffers radiation. It’s such basic information.
Mark
If one of the Korean Olympic athletes can eat it, anyone can.
ShinkansenCaboose
Best ever peaches.
And Zuchi is correct. Much lower levels.
kurisupisu
Into the environment….
Samit Basu
@Hans
It's not just Fukushima that's radiation contaminated, but its surrounding 13 prefectures as well.
ShinkansenCaboose
Fukushima peaches are the best in the world and for the last two years have not been able
to get them. Terrible
BeerDeliveryGuy
If the tested radiation levels are below those set by the FDA, (which they are) I don’t see a problem.
However, there will be the issue of name association, such as when Corona Beer had to suspend production because of a certain Chinese virus.
Pukey2
Rather you than me.
bokuda
It's amazing how Japanese peasants will always coverup any human catastrophe to support the government narrative.
Go watch Minamata, the last movie of Jonny Deep; has a lot in common with the Fukushima fiasco.
Andy
A bit soon, maybe wait at least another 1,000 years.
kennyG
I enjoyed the news report that South Korea's tantrum was all ignored at IAEA conference almost at the same timing, and hence, SK ended up with piling shame on top of shame. IAEA should check much more into what's going on SK's nuclear plants rather than Fukushima