Japan began to discharge nuclear-contaminated water into the sea, causing concern in many countries. Malaysia's Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation announced on the 27th that in addition to installing radiation detectors in the waters of East Malaysia Sabah, it will also conduct fourth-level testing on high-risk foods imported from Japan.
Malaysia's Minister of Science, Technology and Innovation Cheng Likang said in a post on the 27th that in response to the Japanese government's discharge of nuclear treatment water into the sea, the authorities have installed a "multispectral water quality monitoring system" in the waters of Sabah, East Malaysia, to detect water quality, and will also add four radiation detectors in territorial waters. He pointed out that the instrument operates 24 hours a day to detect water quality radiation in the sea area.
At present, only Vietnam and Singapore have installed detection instruments among Southeast Asian countries, and Malaysia is the third Southeast Asian country to install such instruments. At the same time, the Malaysian Ministry of Health has also conducted a Level 4 inspection of high-risk food imported from Japan to analyze the radioactive material content.
Source: Phoenix TV Information Station
Editor: Qiu Guo