Japan will ban the supply of robots, medicines and radioactive materials to Russia from February

38
The Japanese government continues to strictly follow the sanctions policy of the West against Russia. And now Tokyo, as part of a new package of sanctions, has decided to expand the list of products that cannot be imported into Russia from Japan.

Since the beginning of February, the import into Russia of products related to medicine, but also allegedly related to the military sphere, has been banned. So it is impossible to export vaccines and medical products, as well as radioactive materials to Russia. The export was also banned. robots.



Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry announced new restrictions on Russia today.

The sanctions package also included equipment for nuclear facilities, oil and natural gas exploration, as well as a number of chemicals, including tear gas.

As for medical devices, this applies only to military products, the country's Ministry of Economy explained.
The following are under the ban:

medical products, including vaccines, immunotoxins, as well as raw materials for military bacterial substances

the Japanese Ministry of Economy said in a statement.

The list of products banned for import into Russia turned out to be a lot more - more than 80 items in total. The new bans will come into effect on February 3 this year.

Thus, Tokyo is consistently pursuing the anti-Russian policy of the West. Recall that since the beginning of the NWO in Ukraine, the anti-Russian sanctions imposed by Japan have already affected more than 900 Russian citizens and more than 50 organizations in the Russian Federation.

This is despite the fact that recently the government of Japan announced its readiness to hold talks on the "joint extraction of marine resources" in the South Kuriles. Such Japanese "logic" ...
Our news channels

Subscribe and stay up to date with the latest news and the most important events of the day.

38 comments
Information
Dear reader, to leave comments on the publication, you must sign in.
  1. +13
    27 January 2023 10: 06
    Recall a true anecdote

    In 2005, Japan banned the export of drones to China to prevent China from acquiring advanced technology.

    In 2020, Japan banned the use of Chinese drones based on the protection of classified information inside the country.
    1. +2
      27 January 2023 10: 20
      This is despite the fact that recently the government of Japan announced its readiness to hold talks on the "joint extraction of marine resources" in the South Kuriles. Such Japanese "logic" ...

      And why blame something on Japanese logic, if it is primarily subordinated to the interests of Japan itself.
      We would have to deal with our logic once and for all, especially in the issue of concluding the so-called. "peace treaty" and the ridge of the Southern Kuriles. The issue is still not closed and raises vague doubts about the principled position of Russia on its solution.
      1. 0
        27 January 2023 10: 32
        This question is closed. ...................... It's time for admins to change the algorithms.
      2. +1
        27 January 2023 10: 33
        Quote: credo
        We would have to deal with our logic once and for all, especially in the issue of concluding the so-called. "peace treaty" and the ridge of the Southern Kuriles. The issue is still not closed and raises vague doubts about the principled position of Russia on its solution.

        Well, I don’t know, you probably missed this information, but the issue of discussing the transfer of the Kuril Islands to Japan has been completely closed since March 2022, as the Russian side notified official Tokyo - "Russia considers further discussion of the peace treaty impossible."
        https://ria.ru/20220323/sanktsii-1779521892.html
        1. +1
          27 January 2023 10: 52
          Well, I don’t know, you probably missed this information, but the issue of discussing the transfer of the Kuril Islands to Japan has been completely closed since March 2022, as the Russian side notified official Tokyo - "Russia considers further discussion of the peace treaty impossible."

          I would agree with you if it were stated specifically and concretely, but the position of our Foreign Ministry, announced on 22.03.2022/XNUMX/XNUMX, suggests the opposite:

          The official representative of the Russian Foreign Ministry, Maria Zakharova, in a commentary to Gazeta.Ru, told when negotiations with Japan on a peace treaty could resume.

          “[It will be possible] under favorable conditions for Russia,” she said.
          1. -1
            27 January 2023 17: 52
            Quote: credo

            I would agree with you if it were stated specifically and concretely, but the position of our Foreign Ministry, announced on 22.03.2022/XNUMX/XNUMX, suggests the opposite:

            The official representative of the Russian Foreign Ministry, Maria Zakharova, in a commentary to Gazeta.Ru, told when negotiations with Japan on a peace treaty could resume.

            “[It will be possible] under favorable conditions for Russia,” she said.

            The topic of the Kuriles and the signing of a peace treaty were almost resolved back in the 50s, according to the formula 2 islands for us, two islands for the Japanese, but mattresses got into the matter and the process turned into a half-century tug-of-war with more or less success, essentially zero, but with glimpses i.e. bilateral use of marine resources, a special economic zone, etc. before Japan joined the anti-Russian coalition on sanctions, which nullified all the gaps and glimpses. The fact that Zakharova said (it will be possible) under favorable conditions for Russia means only one thing - as long as Japan acts in line with American interests, there will be no negotiations.
            PS- How soon do you think Tokyo will get out of the "guardianship" of mattresses? If you answer this question correctly, then in fact you will receive an answer about when the favorable conditions that Zakharova spoke about will come. hi
  2. +7
    27 January 2023 10: 06
    and radioactive materials
    Are they talking about used cars after Fukushima?
    1. +2
      27 January 2023 10: 29
      No, radioactive water will not be dumped into the sea.. Although no, they will, but they want to fish for themselves in the Kuriles. Samurai are badass.
    2. 0
      27 January 2023 11: 21
      Just now I watched a story about the cultivation of ascidia by the Japanese. In sea water, the content of vanadium is 1,44 μg / l, in ascidians it is 107 times higher. Yield 150 kg/m² year. Roughly multiplying and reducing 0,02 g of vanadium per meter of plantations comes out. Let them also mess around with their water. Plankton collects thorium, some species concentrate 350 times more than in the ocean. What ancient radiolarians collect uranium. Strontium and cesium, I don’t remember in which organs of the fish they accumulate, it seems in the liver. If you don’t want to collect radioactive materials by chemical and physical methods, indulge in natural storage, it turns out)))
    3. +5
      27 January 2023 11: 55
      Quote: Trapp1st
      and radioactive materials
      Are they talking about used cars after Fukushima?

      To be honest, I just don't understand about these "radioactive materials".
      It's not weapons-grade plutonium, is it? And not fuel for nuclear power plants? Apparently, we are talking about some isotopes used in medicine, etc.
      Quite, quite recently, we were shouting in the news that Russia could provide the whole world and three or four more neighboring galaxies with the same medical isotopes, about our self-sufficiency in matters of radioactive materials, and just do everything.

      So what do we buy from them? Next Mistrals?

      Knowing our hucksters, I would not be at all surprised if SUDDENLY it turns out that we supply crude oil, for example, to Poland, and we buy gasoline from them. And, characteristically, trade would go through the territory of Ukraine.
      For them, this is normal.
      The story of our supply of grain to Turkey and the purchase of flour from Turkey is proof of this.
      For example, Yaroslavl.


      And this is Ivanovo


      And here - Yekaterinburg
      1. +1
        27 January 2023 13: 11
        I wouldn’t be surprised if, after the well-known phrase “about only tomatoes”, Turkey sharply increased the export of tomato paste to the Russian Federation .. In the PopMech magazine, a cheer article about “Russian carbon”, and a year later, howls that the MS-21 was left without a “black wing” due to sanctions and the inability to purchase carbon fiber in the states and Japan.
      2. +2
        27 January 2023 13: 36
        Dear soldier! In Yaroslavl, I fell. This elevator stood for a long time and only problems from it were. Any extreme have chosen. You better look at "made by us" to see how many new ones are being built. hi
        1. +3
          27 January 2023 14: 33
          Quote: VadimLives
          You better look at "made by us" to see how many new ones are being built.

          Yes, I build myself. Only elevators were not necessary - there were no orders. Reconstruction for four was carried out 12-13 years ago, and even now they are abandoned.
          I'm not talking about what we have built, but about the fact that we are moving with brisk steps towards the 90s - "we don't need our own, we'll buy everything."
          Should we not grind flour from our record wheat harvests? I was not interested in this issue, but I think that the price of Turkish flour is very different from the price of our wheat.
          1. 0
            29 January 2023 12: 24
            I'm not a builder, I'm, excuse me, a bomber. And at the expense of BUY, I agree with you. Tau to our GPZ under this slogan was smashed .... hi
  3. +4
    27 January 2023 10: 08
    For a long time, Japanese fishing schooners have not been sunk for poaching ... you have to start, and right away at the home port. And do not care...they had a criminal intent in relation to the resources of Russia.
  4. +4
    27 January 2023 10: 08
    The Americans carried out fruitful "explanatory" work with the Japanese, explaining who is who and how to behave in the current situation. The Japanese understood everything and enthusiastically set to work. And what sanctions have we imposed on Japan, besides refusing to negotiate on catching fish from the Kuriles and banning 63 individuals from entering our country?
    1. +5
      27 January 2023 10: 17
      Quote: rotmistr60
      The Americans carried out fruitful "explanatory" work with the Japanese, explaining who is who and how to behave in the current situation. The Japanese understood everything and enthusiastically set to work. What sanctions have we imposed on Japan? except for the refusal to negotiate on catching fish from the Kuriles and the ban on entry into our country of 63 individuals?

      Soon Medvedev will draw a "red line" in his telegram laughing
    2. 0
      27 January 2023 10: 25
      Quote: rotmistr60
      And what sanctions have we imposed on Japan, besides refusing to negotiate on catching fish from the Kuriles and banning 63 individuals from entering our country?

      There is nowhere to go. After all, Japan is 100% dependent on energy imports. They have nothing of their own: no oil, no gas, no coal. In many areas, Japan is in no way inferior in terms of the severity of sanctions against Russia to either the United States or other members of the G33; in energy, it leaves a “window” for itself. And Washington is pushing. Japan has frozen assets of the Central Bank of Russia denominated in yen for $7 billion. The Japanese want a stable energy supply for themselves, and for "bad Russia" - terrible sanctions. It is believed that if they are carried out in agreement with other GXNUMX countries, the Japanese will be guaranteed their own energy security.
      Russia has nothing to answer, imports from Russia are generally small, as well as exports from Japan to Russia. Only 1-2%.
  5. +6
    27 January 2023 10: 13
    Well, they forbade them to catch crab near the Sakhalin Ridge, otherwise they had already begun to feel at home. But they carry Russian LNG anyway, there is no way without it. I think Russia will deal with this problem as well.
  6. The comment was deleted.
    1. 0
      27 January 2023 11: 31
      No matter how much I disagree with you, I still recommend "filtering the market" yourself or the moderators will do it for you. ))
  7. +3
    27 January 2023 10: 15
    Will we continue to supply oil and gas to Japan anyway?
    1. -1
      27 January 2023 20: 24
      Quote: ALARI
      Will we continue to supply oil and gas to Japan anyway?

      Ah, yak! Let's not just gardens.
  8. +2
    27 January 2023 10: 16
    The list of products banned for import into Russia turned out to be a lot more - more than 80 items in total.

    According to the report of the department for March this year, Japan depends on imports of Russian LNG by 8,8%, coking coal - by 8%, oil - by 3,6%, ferrochromium - by 50%, palladium - by 43% and ferrosilicon - by 33%.
    With the current energy crisis, there is little opportunity for buyers and utilities to purchase additional LNG supplies for the winter of 2023 or 2024.
    Japan continued to rely on aging coal-fired thermal power plants (TPPs) to meet electricity demand during the energy crisis.
  9. 0
    27 January 2023 10: 16
    This is despite the fact that recently the government of Japan announced on readiness to negotiate on "joint extraction of marine resources" in the South Kurils region.


    Well, fuck it in Russia...
    Smoke American tobacco or some other tutune.
  10. +6
    27 January 2023 10: 17
    Japan will ban the supply of robots, medicines and radioactive materials to Russia from February

    Radioactive materials, as I understand it, are garbage. Let them store in their Fukushima in Nagasaki with Hiroshima. Medicines are bad, robots are probably the same. But the worst thing is that we will continue to supply them with hydrocarbons. Disgusting, disgusting.
    1. -1
      27 January 2023 11: 30
      We are at war for markets, and people like you are ready to give everything. Only now I would like to see how you will vote here that everything is gone.
  11. +2
    27 January 2023 10: 17
    As I understand it, ours now in the form of an asymmetric response will stir up an attraction of unprecedented generosity and goodwill. Well, how else with "partners"?
  12. +2
    27 January 2023 10: 18
    We need to support Japan, refuse to import all of its cosmetics, soap powder, etc., if they want to, they need to go to a meeting!
    1. +1
      27 January 2023 11: 36
      Quote: Igor Polovodov
      refuse to import all her cosmetics, soap powder, etc., if they want to, they need to go to a meeting!

      There is no need to refuse, it is necessary to raise import duties to the skies, after saturating the market with similar goods from other manufacturers.
  13. +3
    27 January 2023 10: 27
    "This is despite the fact that the other day the government of Japan announced its readiness to hold talks on the "joint extraction of marine resources" in the South Kuriles. Such a Japanese "logic" ..." (c) This logic did not appear out of nowhere. Fritz, the British, etc., oil and gas and all the good from which shells and cartridges are riveted, then Banderva is driven against us, pzhalsta. Again, fuel and lubricants are sold on which enemy armored vehicles drive. Let in detours, but deliver. So this is not only Japanese logic, it is also our logic (or rather, our power). And I don’t understand is it Tolstoy’s fault, or is our economy without these svo-lo-whose land? Too much globalized that you have to tear on the living?
  14. -1
    27 January 2023 10: 33
    Thanks to our "young reformers" we can't do anything of our own except weapons.
    1. +1
      27 January 2023 10: 56
      As it already turns out with weapons, it’s a matter of seams. Only Soviet "galoshes" save. ..
    2. 0
      27 January 2023 11: 39
      Quote: Million
      we can’t do anything of our own except weapons.

      So the weapon came in handy ... and there, God forbid, we will take out the production facilities as indemnities)))
  15. 0
    27 January 2023 10: 53
    ..... the Japanese government announced its readiness to negotiate "joint extraction of marine resources" in the South Kuriles.

    So far, the Japanese government is not ready to conduct such negotiations. As you prepare, you can listen to them.
  16. +2
    27 January 2023 11: 43
    I think ours will again express strict indignation to Japan, draw a couple of hundred red lines and that's it?
    Although they simply canceled the entire catch of marine resources in our economic zone for a couple of months, and if it doesn’t come, then there is still Sakhalin 2 there.
  17. 0
    27 January 2023 12: 46
    Quote: "From February, Japan will ban the supply of robots, medicines and radioactive materials to Russia"
    I wonder about radioactive materials, did you decide not to drain the water from Fukushima?
    So it turns out?
  18. +1
    27 January 2023 21: 43
    Japan will ban the supply of robots, medicines and radioactive materials to Russia from February

    And we need to ban the supply of OIL and GAS to Japan from the end of January!
  19. 0
    28 January 2023 09: 48
    It is Japan that buys radioactive substances from Russia, and a LOT of it. 10% of Japan's energy is nuclear power plants. The fuel rods for these nuclear power plants are supplied by the United States .... and the nuclear fuel in these fuel rods comes from Russia.
    In terms of nuclear technology, Russia is ahead of the rest, and by a very large margin. All countries of the world with nuclear power plants directly or indirectly purchase Russian nuclear materials. The most advanced, after Russia, country in nuclear technology is France. Nuclear waste from nuclear power plants in France is processed by Rosatom. The French themselves do not know how to do this, as well as all countries except Russia.

"Right Sector" (banned in Russia), "Ukrainian Insurgent Army" (UPA) (banned in Russia), ISIS (banned in Russia), "Jabhat Fatah al-Sham" formerly "Jabhat al-Nusra" (banned in Russia) , Taliban (banned in Russia), Al-Qaeda (banned in Russia), Anti-Corruption Foundation (banned in Russia), Navalny Headquarters (banned in Russia), Facebook (banned in Russia), Instagram (banned in Russia), Meta (banned in Russia), Misanthropic Division (banned in Russia), Azov (banned in Russia), Muslim Brotherhood (banned in Russia), Aum Shinrikyo (banned in Russia), AUE (banned in Russia), UNA-UNSO (banned in Russia), Mejlis of the Crimean Tatar people (banned in Russia), Legion “Freedom of Russia” (armed formation, recognized as terrorist in the Russian Federation and banned), Kirill Budanov (included to the Rosfinmonitoring list of terrorists and extremists)

“Non-profit organizations, unregistered public associations or individuals performing the functions of a foreign agent,” as well as media outlets performing the functions of a foreign agent: “Medusa”; "Voice of America"; "Realities"; "Present time"; "Radio Freedom"; Ponomarev Lev; Ponomarev Ilya; Savitskaya; Markelov; Kamalyagin; Apakhonchich; Makarevich; Dud; Gordon; Zhdanov; Medvedev; Fedorov; Mikhail Kasyanov; "Owl"; "Alliance of Doctors"; "RKK" "Levada Center"; "Memorial"; "Voice"; "Person and law"; "Rain"; "Mediazone"; "Deutsche Welle"; QMS "Caucasian Knot"; "Insider"; "New Newspaper"