‘Tsukiji market should stay in Tsukiji’
Hundreds protest against closure of world famous fish market and its move to new site.
Tokyo: Braving steady typhoondriven rain, several hundred protesters held a demonstration in Tokyo against the closure of Tsukiji, the world’s biggest fish market and a lucrative tourist magnet.
The two-hour protest on Saturday drew fishmongers, clients and fans of the market, which is due to close its doors on Oct 6 after 83 years to move to a site in Toyosu, several kilometres east.
“Save the culture of Tsukiji” and “Tsukiji can live for another 100 years” were among the slogans chanted by the protesters, who have filed a legal suit in a bid to prevent the move.
Lawyer Kenji Utsunomiya said he had “always argued for Tsukiji to stay in Tsukiji”.
“The new site in Toyosu is not suitable for wholesalers. There are going to be a lot of problems,” said Utsunomiya, who ran to be mayor of Tokyo in 2012 and 2014.
Critics worry about soil contamination in Toyosu, which delayed the move from its initial date of 2016.
Tokyo mayor Yuriko Koike insisted earlier this month that the new complex, located on a former gas plant, would be safe and provide a “cutting-edge” environment for the selling of fish.
Utsunomiya, however, said protesters could not understand why Tokyo would get rid of a site like Tsukiji, which has a “global reputation and which all the foreign tourists will want to visit, especially as we approach the Tokyo Olympics in 2020”.
Proponents of the move argue that Tsukiji is no longer fit for purpose, especially when it comes to modern-day hygiene and fire regulations.
But Asunaro Suetake, one of the protesters, said it was “strange to move the world’s biggest fish market to a polluted site, especially when the majority of fishmongers are opposed”.
Tsukiji market opened in 1935 and is famed for its pre-dawn tuna auctions, with one fish going for more than US$320,000 (RM1.3mil) at the market’s final New Year’s auction last year.
The new Toyosu market will officially open its doors on Oct 11. — AFP