UN nuclear agency team watches Japanese lab workers prepare fish samples from damaged nuclear plant

Minced samples of redwing searobin, one of the sample fish from Fukushima, to ship to several laboratories including China, South Korea and Canada for analysis of tritium, are placed at Marine Ecology Research Institute on Friday, Oct. 20, 2023 in Onjuku, Chiba Prefecture near Tokyo, Japan. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko, Pool)

ONJUKU, Japan (AP) — Scientists from the U.N. nuclear agency watched Friday as Japanese lab workers prepared samples of fish collected at a seafood market near the Fukushima nuclear plant to test the safety of treated radioactive wastewater released from the damaged plant into the sea.

The discharge of wastewater began on Aug. 24 and is expected to continue for decades. It has been strongly opposed by fishing groups and neighboring countries, including China and Russia, which have banned all imports of Japanese seafood.

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