Health warnings have been issued across Japan as the thick smog
engulfing China has begun to move over the island nation; pollution
levels across the country are reportedly skyrocketing.
"Access to our air-pollution monitoring system has been almost
impossible since last week, and the telephone here has been constantly
ringing because worried people keep asking us about the impact on health," an environment ministry official told AFP.
Air
pollution over western Japan has far exceeded government standards
recently – up to 42 percent in some cases – straining the already-tense
relations between the two Asian countries.
"China is our neighbor, and all sorts of problems happen between us all the time," local resident Takaharu Abiko told AFP. "It is very worrying. This is dangerous pollution, like poison, and we can't protect ourselves. It's scary."
Japanese
officials and scientists have said that citizens should not panic over
the pollution, as the smog was not as bad as in similar incidents two
years ago. In 2011, a cloud of suffocating smog hung over western Japan
for several days.
Authorities have also warned that people
with respiratory illnesses and small children should take extra care to
protect themselves from the health hazard.
More air pollution will
arrive in western Japan on Tuesday, the Japanese Ministry of
Environment said, adding that the country's skies will start to clear by
Wednesday.
About three weeks ago, China was struck with a major
upsurge in air pollution levels. By the end of January, the government
was forced to announce that the air pollution presented a health threat.
The increase in pollution is mostly a result of the boom in factory
manufacturing in China.
The photos below show various sites in China that experienced heavy air pollution in recent days
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