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Fukushima nuclear plant: South Koreans stockpile salt as Japan set to dump treated radioactive waste water into sea
- ‘As a mother raising two children, I can’t just sit back and do nothing,’ said a woman, who recently bought 5kg of salt
- Japan said it has provided science-backed explanations of its plan to neighbours, but that had failed to calm nerves
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South Korean shoppers are snapping up sea salt and other items as worry grows about their safety with Japan due to dump more than 1 million metric tonnes of treated radioactive water from a wrecked nuclear power plant into the sea.
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The water was mainly used to cool damaged reactors at the Fukushima power plant north of Tokyo, after it was hit by an earthquake and tsunami in 2011.
The release of the water from huge storage tanks into the Pacific is expected soon though no date has been set.
Japan has given repeated assurances that the water is safe, saying it has been filtered to remove most isotopes though it does contain traces of tritium, an isotope of hydrogen hard to separate from water.
But fishermen and shoppers in Japan and across the region are afraid.
“I recently bought 5 kilograms of salt,” Lee Young-min, a 38-year-old mother of two children, said as she made seaweed soup in her kitchen in Seongnam, just south of the South Korean capital, Seoul.
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