Japan pushes ASEAN to lift export restrictions
JAPAN: Japan pressed Southeast Asian nations on Tuesday to
lift curbs on its exports imposed after last year’s earthquake and subsequent
Fukushima nuclear disaster.
Speaking at a regional summit, Tsuyoshi Michael Yamaguchi,
Japan’s senior vice-minister for foreign affairs, called for a review of
restrictions introduced amid fears some agricultural produce could be
contaminated by radiation. “I wanted to ask countries to relax or lift
restrictions... based on scientific data,” Yamaguchi told reporters at the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) meeting in Phnom Penh.
“People will find that there’s no more danger,” he said,
adding the perception of Japanese goods as being contaminated “was not the
case.” Yamaguchi earlier told the gathering of ASEAN foreign ministers -- to
which Japan, China and South Korea are also invited -- that he hoped for
“fruitful discussions” on the issue.
His comments came a day after Japan posted poor economic
figures, underscoring fears about a recovery for the world’s third-largest
economy amid turmoil in Europe, a key export market.
Meltdowns at the Fukushima plant in the aftermath of last
year’s March 11 tsunami sent radioactive particles into the air and water,
contaminating crops grown near the power station and polluting waters where
seafood is harvested. The Philippines, Thailand and Malaysia were among a host
of countries to impose restrictions on some Japanese produce after the
disaster.
Exports of Japanese farm products -- once prized by its
neighbours for quality -- fell 7.4 percent in 2011 from the previous year while
overseas sales of marine products slumped nearly 11 percent. In April, Japan
agreed to try to double trade with ASEAN’s 10 members over the next decade.
According to the World Bank, Japan is already the largest
foreign investor in Thailand and the Philippines, and the second or third
largest in Malaysia, Indonesia, and Singapore. AFP
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