Joke Collection Website - Bulletin headlines - Seoul birth slogan

Seoul birth slogan

According to South Korean media reports, all walks of life in South Korea protested the Japanese government's decision to discharge Fukushima nuclear sewage into the sea. Some old merchants who have worked for many years said that whenever news reports related to nuclear wastewater in Japan appeared, many customers would immediately refuse to buy Japanese aquatic products, and this time was no exception. Retailers such as large supermarkets and department stores in South Korea said that they stopped selling seafood products made in Japan from 20 1 1 and have no plans to replace them in the future.

At present, many supermarkets in Korea have clearly stated that they will stop selling Japanese seafood products from 20 1 1, and there are no plans to change in the future. Some of them are more radical. For example, a large supermarket in Seoul hangs many slogans of "boycott Japanese goods".

In response to the discharge of nuclear sewage into the ocean, the Ministry of Marine and Fisheries of the Republic of Korea announced that it intends to strengthen the traceability supervision of the origin of Nissan seafood and strengthen law enforcement.

Extended data

There was a protest in front of the Japanese Embassy in South Korea.

In recent days, protests and demonstrations have taken turns in front of the Japanese Embassy in South Korea. On the afternoon of April 14, more than 20 national fisheries organizations gathered here and urged Japan to withdraw the relevant decision. They submitted a statement to the Japanese Embassy, condemning that "the discharge of nuclear sewage is tantamount to a nuclear attack on Korean nationals and all mankind, which is a devastating act".

Seoul Youth Climate Action and Seoul Youth Progressive Party also held a press conference to condemn Japan for "forcibly discharging sewage in an incomprehensible way".

The "citizens' action without nuclear weapons", composed of 3 1 citizens' groups, claimed that it would seek all means to prevent sewage from entering the sea, and called the decision of the Japanese government "nuclear terrorism". The organization said that the Japanese government said that the sewage would be diluted with seawater before being discharged, but the total amount of radioactive materials entering the sea remained unchanged, which would bring irreparable disasters to the marine ecosystem and even human beings.