Chinese holidaymakers visiting Japan have said they are enjoying eating sushi amid Beijing's ban on Japanese seafood imports, imposed following the release of treated radioactive water from the wrecked Fukushima nuclear complex into the sea.

"I eat sushi every day," said a woman in her 40s from China's Zhejiang Province while shopping in the upmarket Ginza shopping district in Tokyo during China's eight-day National Day vacation period, which kicked off on Sept. 29. "I don't care where the fish were caught."

Li Pei from Qingdao in China's Shandong Province holds a camera at Ginza district in Tokyo on Oct. 3, 2023. (Kyodo)

Li Pei, another Chinese tourist who was visiting Ginza during the holiday season from Qingdao in Shandong Province, said he "has no worries" about the water discharge.

"I understand that the concentration level of (radioactive) tritium in the treated water is below international safety standards and has limited effect," the 40-year-old said.

Since Japan began releasing the water into the sea from the Fukushima plant in late August, Chinese media, including The Global Times, a tabloid affiliated with China's ruling Communist Party, have reported on Japan-bound trip cancellations and Chinese consumers' concerns about the safety of Japanese products.

Beijing, which has repeatedly urged Japan to halt the discharge and calls it "nuclear-contaminated water," imposed a blanket ban on Japanese seafood imports after the water release commenced.

The Chinese woman from Zhejiang Province said that Chinese local media outlets emphasizing the dangers of the Fukushima water are being "biased" but noted that "not many people in China" are able to make decisions based upon information obtained from overseas.

A tourist bus operator in Tokyo said it appears that "young people with flexible ways of thinking are choosing to travel independently" to Japan.

According to Japanese airline companies servicing flights from China to Japan, seats on their planes were almost fully booked during the eight-day holiday, which also combines the Mid-Autumn Festival.

Data analysis by Chinese internet search giant Baidu Inc. and other companies also showed that Japan tops the list of popular overseas destinations for Chinese travelers during the vacation period.


Related coverage:

IAEA team to visit Japan late October to review Fukushima water release

Japan stresses safety of Fukushima water release at ASEAN-plus-3 meet

Japan begins 2nd round of Fukushima treated water discharge