「安全ならば日本で保管せよ」...ソロモン諸島、処理水放出を批判
”If it's safe, store it in Japan”...Solomon Islands criticizes release of treated water
``If it's safe, keep it in Japan.'' On the 22nd (local time), Prime Minister Sogavare of the Pacific island nation of the Lomon Islands criticized the release of treated water from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant into the ocean at the United Nations General Assembly.
According to foreign media such as the South China Morning Post, Prime Minister Sogavare said on the same day during a general discussion at the United Nations General Assembly that the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAE) said the release plan met safety standards.
He pointed out that the report in A) was not conclusive and the data was also inadequate, inadequate and biased. Prime Minister Sogavare expressed concern that Japan's release of treated water would have a serious negative impact on the South Pacific Islands.
expressed. ``If treated water is safe, it must be stored in Japan,'' the Prime Minister said, ``The fact that treated water is being released shows that it is not safe.''
He went on to say, ``Releasing treated water is tantamount to an attack on the trust and solidarity of the entire world that unites borders and generations,'' and urged Japan to immediately suspend the release and find other options.
Japan plans to release 31,200 tons of treated water four times by March next year. This is approximately 2.2 million liters of treated water stored at the Fukushima nuclear power plant.
At an amount equivalent to 3%, the Japanese government claims that it is "safe" to release treated water. Opinions are divided on how countries react to this. First of all, not only the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
Some Western countries, including the United States, have expressed their understanding. China is the opposite. The Chinese government has accused Japan of treating the sea as a ``sewer'' and is restricting imports of Japanese seafood.
It was completely interrupted. In response, Japanese media such as Kyodo News reported that Prime Minister Sogavare expressed his gratitude for China's infrastructure support and then brought up the issue of Fukushima treated water being released into the ocean.
He quipped that the Solo Lomon Islands had strong ties with China.
2023/09/23 18:11 KST
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