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Radiation Discovered in Rice Near Tokyo
Published: August 19, 2011
TOKYO — Japanese inspectors found the first case of
radioactive contamination in rice, the national grain, on Friday, adding it
to the list of foods harmed by the accident at the stricken Fukushima
Daiichi nuclear plant.
Inspectors in Ibaraki Prefecture, just north of Tokyo, found radioactive
cesium in a sample of rice from the city of Hokota, about 100 miles south of
the radiation-spewing nuclear plant. The prefecture said the radiation was
well within safe levels: it measured 52 becquerels per kilogram, about
one-tenth of the government-set limit for grains.
The prefecture said two other samples tested at the same time showed no
contamination.
The Agriculture Ministry said it was the first time that more than trace
levels of cesium had been found in rice, though it said there was no health
risk. Still, the discovery won wide attention here. Rice is a staple in most
Japanese dishes and holds a place in the collective national heart that
exceeds that of apple pie for Americans or baguettes for the French.
Fears of atomic contamination of the rice crop had been building ahead of
this year’s autumn harvest, the first since the earthquake, tsunami and
nuclear accident in March. Adding to the anxiety is that Japan’s mountainous
northeast, which bore the brunt of the triple disaster, is one of the
nation’s most productive rice-growing regions.
The discovery Friday was also likely to fan growing fears here about the
safety of Japan’s food supply. Radiation exceeding safe levels has already
been found in products including beef, spinach and green tea.
On Friday, the Agriculture Ministry decided to keep in place a ban on sales
of beef from Fukushima Prefecture, the site of the nuclear accident, after
another sample was found to contain high levels of radioactive cesium. The
ban was imposed a month ago after the detection of radioactive cesium in
beef that exceeded safe levels.
The ministry said it would lift a similar ban on beef from Miyagi
Prefecture, which borders Fukushima to the north, after farmers there took
measures to limit radiation exposure to cows, like not feeding them locally
grown rice straw.
Radioactive Substances Found in Breast Milk of 5 Japanese Women
Published May 19, 2011 | FoxNews.com
TOKYO -- Small amounts of radioactive substances have been detected in the
breast milk of five women in Japan, online newspaper Japan Today reported
Thursday, citing a study by a citizen's group.
Taking samples from 41 women across five prefectures, the tests found cesium
in the breast milk of four women in Tokyo, Fukushima and Ibaraki, and
radioactive iodine in the breast milk of a woman in Fukushima.
The study, released Wednesday, was conducted one month after a magnitude-9.0
earthquake and tsunami rocked Japan’s northeast coast, triggering a nuclear
crisis at the Fukushima nuclear plant which saw radiation leak into the
ground, sea and soil.
Reports of contamination in water and food emerged in the weeks following
the March 11 twin disasters.
Safety levels of radioactive substances in breast milk have not been set by
the Japanese government but readings -- 5.5 becquerels of iodine and up to
10.5 becquerels of cesium -- in all five cases were well below the safe
levels -- 100 becquerels of radioactive iodine and 200 becquerels of cesium
-- for tap water consumption by infants.
The group has called on health authorities to make testing available to
concerned parents.
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