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The Korean team cooks separately that the food at the Japanese Olympic Village is nuclear poison

 


The Korean team cooks separately that the food at the Japanese Olympic Village is nuclear poison

Athletes from other countries have been accommodated at the Olympic Village in Fukushima Prefecture, Japan. The 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster occurred in the vicinity. But now there is no problem.

The South Korean team attending the Olympics has expressed doubts that nuclear radiation will still affect the food content of the region. As a result, they have refused food in the village and are reportedly serving food to nearly 420 South Korean athletes and other members of the team at a hotel with Korean chefs near the sports village. No one from other countries has this problem.

South Korea's launch of a separate food program for athletes and delegates to the Tokyo 2020 Olympics has been particularly reported in the international media.

Japanese authorities say food made from raw materials sourced from the province for the Olympics is quality-tested and safe. But the Korean Olympic Committee has said since last year that it, as a neighbor of Japan, still uses radiation detectors to test food when it imports food from Japan. It is for these reasons that it was decided to eat separately.

Masahisa Sato, a member of Japan's ruling Liberal Democratic Party, said South Korea's food rejection had "touched the hearts of Fukushima residents."

Commenting on the Internet, the Japanese criticized South Korea's decision, saying it was "disappointing" and "unpleasant."

Tomohisa Ishikawa, director of the Macroeconomic Research Center at the Japan Institute of Research, has expressed concern that the move in Korea could tarnish the reputation of the Japanese agricultural brand.

South Korea alone has long been widely criticized for hosting the Tokyo Olympics.

A statement from South Korea's Ministry of Culture, Sport and Tourism called on the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to ban the use of Japan's rising sun flag during the Olympics.

He said the flag was a symbol of Japan's imperialist past and was reminiscent of historical scars and pain. "The swastika in Germany is as disgusting to the people as the red flag is to the people of Korea," they said earlier. Japan says they have been using these symbols since before the war. However, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) did not comply.

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