The United States will closely monitor the outcome of the planned meeting between the leaders of Russia and North Korea and is ready to impose new sanctions without hesitation if both countries violate the arms trade restrictions again.
Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida announced on Monday a 20.7 billion yen ($141 million) emergency fund to help exporters hit by a ban on Japanese seafood imposed by China in response to the release of treated radioactive wastewater from the damaged Fukushima nuclear power plant. Japanese fishing associations and groups in neighboring countries have strongly opposed the release, and China immediately banned all imports of Japanese seafood. Hong Kong has banned Japanese seafood from Fukushima and nine other prefectures.
and the private sector will come together to exchange information on how to break through some of the trade blocs and trade restrictions, this is a step forward in terms of again, stabilising bilaterally. irate again, stabilising bilaterally. we are losing the audio from professional nike, i m not sure if you can still hear me, if you can, i want to ask you you know whether it s possible for the us to want to have a certain level of trade, but not national security sensitive. irate not national security sensitive. we see in the not national security sensitive. - see in the states as well as other countries. see in the states as well as other countries- - - see in the states as well as other countries. apologies for that, we can t really countries. apologies for that, we can t really hear countries. apologies for that, we can t really hear professor - countries. apologies for that, we can t really hear professor who - can t really hear professor who joined us from tokyo, we ll have
Ukraine's Foreign Ministry said on Aug. 26 that it is unacceptable for European Union members to continue the ban on Ukrainian grain imports until the end of 2023.
be inevitable. still to get your question for a country with such a massive fishing and seafood industry the reputational cost could be substantial. that is why despite those assurances japanese fishing groups have told the government they fear it could hurt them. japan is notjust it could hurt them. japan is not just a it could hurt them. japan is notjust a majorfish it could hurt them. japan is notjust a major fish and seafood market, it is a fishing powerhouse, last year it exported well over $2 billion worth of marine products, the backlash we are seeing cannot be written off, the government has recognised this with officials at the ministry of agriculture and fisheries saying they expect a significant hit from those trade restrictions you mention, a lot of that backlash is coming from its major export markets. china is the biggest importer of japanese seafood, beijing has said it will take measures to protect its marine environment, food safety, public health, it has also moved to