In South Korea, Gimhae City inspects Japanese seafood products in preparation for discharge of contaminated water from nuclear power plant

Published 2023년 6월 5일

Tridge summary

Gimhae city in South Korea is conducting a special inspection of imported marine products by the end of June, following Japan's decision to release contaminated water from the Fukushima nuclear power plant. The inspection will focus on compliance with country of origin labeling and will cover around 10,300 restaurants. Violations could result in imprisonment for up to 7 years or a fine of up to 100 million won.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The city of Gimhae, South Gyeongsang Province, announced that it would carry out a special crackdown on the origin of imported marine products by the end of June. Japan's Fukushima nuclear power plant's decision to discharge contaminated water will intensively inspect Japanese seafood to relieve citizens' anxiety. Live snapper, live sea squirt, and live eel, which are likely to violate the country of origin labeling frequently and are highly likely to be violated, and live octopus, live scallop, squid, and hairtail, whose import and consumption temporarily increase during certain times and seasons, are also inspected. About 9,700 general restaurants, 313 restaurants specializing in seafood products, and 269 raw fish restaurants are inspected, focusing on non-labeling of origin, false labeling, and violation of labeling methods. For companies caught violating the country of origin, imprisonment for up to 7 years or a fine of up to 100 million won, or a fine of up to 10 million won ...
Source: Fisheco

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