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Schools egged, businesses harassed: Japan suffers Chinese backlash over Fukushima release

By Jessie Yeung, Junko Ogura, Emiko Jozuka and Saki Toi, CNN

Tokyo CNN  —  A wave of online harassment and vitriol directed at Japanese people following the release of treated radioactive wastewater from Fukushima has sent tensions between Japan and China soaring, prompting Tokyo to summon the Chinese ambassador.

China’s heavily censored internet exploded in outrage after Japan officially began releasing the wastewater on Thursday.

Several videos on social media show Chinese callers dialing the numbers of Japanese businesses and institutions, then shouting into the phone, “Why do you release nuclear polluted water to the ocean?”

The comments below the videos are full of users sharing numbers to call, and encouraging each other. “I just called as well,” one person wrote.

The mayor of Fukushima, Hiroshi Kohata, said on Saturday the city’s town hall alone had received about 200 such harassment calls in two days. Many other locations around the city have received similar calls, he said, including elementary and junior high schools, restaurants, hotels and inns.

“Many of them are from +86 (China’s country code) and are in Chinese,” he added in a Facebook post. “In addition to the damage caused by the nuclear accident, Fukushima is also burdened with the aftermath. We demand that the government be informed of this situation as soon as possible and take action.”

One seafood market in Fukushima prefecture received dozens of calls from Chinese numbers on Friday, according to Japanese public broadcaster NHK.

Japan’s foreign ministry said on Monday it had summoned the Chinese ambassador over the harassment calls, saying the incidents were “extremely regrettable and worrisome.”

It urged Beijing to take “appropriate measures immediately to prevent the situation from escalating,” and to avoid spreading inaccurate information about the wastewater release.

It’s not just businesses inside Japan being targeted. Japanese institutions in China have also been harassed, said the foreign ministry, urging Beijing to “ensure the safety of Japanese residents in China and Japanese diplomatic missions in China.”

A stone was thrown into the grounds of a Japanese school in Qingdao, in China’s Shandong province, on Thursday when the release began, according to NHK. The next day, several eggs were thrown at a Japanese school in Suzhou, in China’s Jiangsu province.

No children were hurt in either case, and the schools have since stepped up their security, NHK reported.

The report did not identify the perpetrators or say whether they were motivated by concerns over Fukushima.

But the incidents have nevertheless contributed to the fear and anxiety among Japanese residents in China.

On Thursday as the wastewater release began, the Japanese embassy in China issued a warning to Japanese living in the country, warning them not to “speak Japanese loudly” when out in public, and to “be cautious in your speech and behavior.”

The embassy in Beijing has ramped up security and deployed more personnel around the building, NHK reported.

Security officers in front of the Japanese embassy in Beijing, China, on August 26, 2023.

China’s response, however, has been less than sympathetic.

On Monday, the Chinese embassy in Japan released a statement condemning the release once again, accusing Tokyo of causing “unpredictable harm” to human and marine health, denying that it had spread any misinformation – and claiming that it, too, had received harassment calls, but from Japanese numbers.

In an echo of the Japanese embassy’s statement, it urged Tokyo to protect the safety of Chinese residents in Japan.

When asked what measures China would take to address the harassment, a spokesperson for the Chinese Foreign Ministry said: “China has always protected the safety and lawful interests of foreign nationals in China according to law.”

Sushi diplomacy

The release of treated radioactive water from Fukushima prompted a swift and angry response from Chinese authorities, who on Thursday announced a ban on all seafood imports from Japan.

Many social media users have gone a step further by advocating a broader boycott of Japanese products. On Douyin, the Chinese version of TikTok, users have circulated lists of Japanese brands ranging from cosmetics to food and beverages, and urged people not to buy their products.

But some observers outside China say the explosive backlash in the country may be more politically driven than scientifically informed, and accuse Beijing of a double standard. Many countries, including China, release treated radioactive water from their own nuclear plants, sometimes at higher concentrations than in Fukushima.

This fact, however, is missing from online discussions in China. The few voices trying to explain the science behind the discharge have been censored and scrubbed from social media.

“Contamination is scientifically not that serious, and China’s own water release and other countries’ water releases are much more (concentrated) than the Japanese case,” said Yasuhiro Matsuda, a professor of international politics at the University of Tokyo’s Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia.

He added that the discharge isn’t a strategically important issue to China, the way national security is, so the furor may instead be an attempt by Beijing to gain “political leverage.” However, he said the social media attacks and public sentiment had ballooned beyond authorities’ control, becoming “an all-out bashing of Japan.”

Some supporters have taken to eating regional seafood in a show of solidarity.

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol and Prime Minister Han Duck-soo ate a seafood lunch on Monday, the presidential office said, adding that sashimi and grilled mackerel were served for lunch at the office cafeteria.

Photos released by the office show government workers and media personnel feasting on seafood, though there were no such images of Yoon and Han.

Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike tucked into a lunch of raw fish from Fukushima on Friday, a day after the discharge began, said an official from the metropolitan government – adding that it was to show support for the reconstruction of the damaged Tohoku region after the 2011 disaster.

The Tokyo metropolitan government served seafood from Fukushima in its staff cafeteria last week, with the menu featuring items such as fried sardines and grilled mackerel. Other prefectures are considering similar programs, with the Osaka governor proposing Fukushima seafood be served at all government cafeterias.

The US ambassador to Japan, Rahm Emanuel, is expected to visit a city in Fukushima this week, where he plans to eat locally caught fish to show support for the wastewater release, a US embassy official told CNN.

A fractious relationship

The tensions between China and Japan come against the backdrop of their historically fractious relationship, which dates back beyond World War II and includes a variety of maritime territorial disputes.

Chinese calls for boycotts of Japan are relatively frequent, breaking out whenever old grievances rear their heads or territorial disputes flare, experts say.

In 2012, trade relations sank to a low point when Japan nationalized a group of islands in the East China Sea claimed by both Tokyo and Beijing, fueling violent anti-Japanese protests across cities in China. The boycotts turned into violent attacks against Japanese-owned or branded factories in China as well as automakers and home appliance retailers.

There are similarities between the situation now and 2012, said Matsuda, including anger and dissatisfaction among the Chinese public, who face high unemployment rates, rising costs of living and slowing economic growth following the pandemic.

The Fukushima issue could simply be a trigger to “release” these frustrations, he said. However, he thought the current controversy was unlikely to spiral into the kinds of attacks and open street protests seen in 2012.

Still, the bilateral relationship looks to be under strain again, with China asking the head of a Japanese political party to postpone his planned visit this week.

The party head had hoped to meet Chinese leader Xi Jinping and hand over a personal letter from Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, Reuters reported, but Chinese authorities told the party on Saturday that “the timing is not appropriate considering the current situation of Japan-China relations.”

Berry Wang, Kathleen Magramo and Nectar Gan contributed reporting.

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