Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. official pans China’s Japanese fish ban

- MARI YAMAGUCHI

TOKYO — U.S. Ambassador to Japan Rahm Emanuel accused China on Friday of using “economic coercion” against Japan by banning imports of Japanese seafood in response to the release of treated wastewater from the damaged Fukushima nuclear plant into the ocean, while Chinese boats continue to fish off Japan’s coasts.

“Economic coercion is the most persistent and pernicious tool in their economic toolbox,” Emanuel said in a speech Friday in Tokyo, calling China’s ban on Japanese seafood the latest example.

China is the biggest market for Japanese seafood, and the ban has badly hurt Japan’s fishing industry.

“China is engaged right now in fishing in Japan’s economic waters while they are simultaneo­usly engaged in the unilateral embargo on Japan’s fish,” Emanuel said. He said China’s intention is to isolate Japan.

Japan began gradually releasing treated wastewater from the crippled Fukushima plant into the sea on Aug. 24. The water has accumulate­d at the plant since it was crippled by an earthquake and tsunami in 2011. China immediatel­y banned imports of Japanese seafood, accusing Tokyo of dumping “radiation contaminat­ed water” into the ocean.

The Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency has said the release, if carried out as planned, will have a negligible effect on the environmen­t, marine life and human health.

Emanuel posted four photos on X, formerly called Twitter, on Friday that he said showed “Chinese vessels fishing off Japan’s coast on Sept. 15, post China’s seafood embargo from the same waters. #Fukushima.”

Emanuel has also posted other comments about China that have been interprete­d as critical, including one on Sept. 15 about Chinese Defense Minister Li Shangfu, who has not appeared in public for weeks, speculatin­g he might have been placed under house arrest.

On Aug. 8, Emanuel posted that Chinese President Xi Jinping’s Cabinet lineup was “resembling Agatha Christies’s novel ‘And Then There Were None,’” noting the disappeara­nces of Li, Foreign Minister Qin Gang, and commanders of China’s rocket force.

Four days later, he accused China of using artificial intelligen­ce to spread false claims that U.S. “weather weapons” had caused the wildfires in Maui and that the U.S. Army had introduced covid-19 to China.

“I think you can have a mature relationsh­ip, have dialogue, conversati­on, but when somebody is offsides … I think the most important thing you have to do is to be able to have veracity and call disinforma­tion disinforma­tion,” he said Friday.

 ?? (AP/Kyodo News) ?? Rahm Emanuel, U.S. Ambassador to Japan, speaks to reporters Friday in Tokyo.
(AP/Kyodo News) Rahm Emanuel, U.S. Ambassador to Japan, speaks to reporters Friday in Tokyo.

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