Japan's Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) recently said it will discharge sewage from the Fukushima nuclear power plant for the fourth time on February 28. This is the fourth time in a row that TEPCO has discharged polluted sewage into the ocean since August, discharging a total of 23,400 gongs-in-law. However, even so, there are still radioactive elements such as cesium and strontium remaining in seawater, which seriously endangers the ecological environment and human health of the ocean.
On April 13 this year, Japan officially made a resolution to discharge it into the ocean after purification and desalination treatment, which caused great controversy and ** around the world. A number of countries and news organizations said that Japan's move was very irresponsible and the damage caused was immeasurable, and strongly demanded that Japan immediately withdraw its emissions. But the Japanese authorities and TEPCO have turned a deaf ear to this, and have gone their own way, ignoring the calls and scrutiny of other countries and the international community, and have continued to push for the discharge of contaminated sewage into the sea.
As an ordinary person who cares about the sea and people, I am both surprised and angry at the fact that Japan is discharging polluted sewage into the sea. I don't understand why Japan would use this method to dispose of irradiated water sources, which is harmful to the environment and to the human body. Is there no other safer and more durable way for Japan? Has Japan ever thought about the consequences of discharging it into the ocean? Does Japan have the right to push its own troubles to the world? Can Japan afford to deal with the potential impact of discharging polluted seawater into the ocean?
It is extremely selfishness, a kind of indifference, a disrespect, disrespect, disrespect, disrespect, and a violation of international laws and moral norms by discharging Japan's polluted seawater into the sea. I call on Japan to immediately stop the discharge of radioactive wastewater into the ocean, to find a more rational way to deal with it, to strengthen exchanges and consultations with other countries in the world, to monitor and evaluate what it has done internationally, and to assume legal obligations for what it has done. At the same time, I also call for increased international pressure on Japan and sanctions against Japan, so as to defend Japan's maritime rights and interests, and to defend the dignity and justice of international law and morality. I firmly believe that only in this way can we work together to protect the planet we live on and build a more harmonious and better world.