Tahiti v Japan | FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup 2021 | Match Highlights



Watch match highlights of Tahiti against Japan in the FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup 2021 quarter-finals.

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46 opiniones en “Tahiti v Japan | FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup 2021 | Match Highlights”

  1. 1st goal (Japan): 1st period
    2nd goal (Japan): 1st period
    1st goal (Tahiti): 2nd period
    2nd goal (Tahiti): 3rd period
    3rd goal (Tahiti): 3rd period
    3rd goal (Japan): 3rd period
    4th goal (Japan): Extra time
    4th goal (Tahiti): Extra time
    5th goal (Japan): Extra time
    The Winner: Japan

  2. The Yomiuri Shimbun reported on the 25th that Tokyo Electric Power Corporation has decided to discharge contaminated water from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant in Japan, where a large amount of radioactive material was leaked, into the sea about 1km away from the nuclear power plant.

    According to the report, TEPCO plans to build an undersea tunnel and discharge contaminated water containing radioactive materials into the sea 1 km away from the nuclear power plant. Japan plans to submit a tunnel construction plan to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission by the end of next month with the goal of discharging contaminated water from the spring of 2023.

    Previously, the Japanese government announced that there was no more space to store the contaminated water accumulated since the nuclear accident caused by the Great East Japan Earthquake in April 2011. Since then, the authorities have considered discharging the contaminated water directly from the shore and discharging it through an undersea tunnel. TEPCO plans to reduce the risk of radioactive materials by diluting and discharging contaminated water. There is also an analysis that the decision was made with the external image in mind. A Japanese government official told the Yomiuri Shimbun, "It costs a lot to build, but the discharge through an undersea tunnel will give a better impression (for Japan)."

    Concerns are growing in neighboring countries including Korea and China due to Japan's discharge of contaminated water. This is because tritium, a radioactive material, remains in the contaminated water even after purification, and it can flow into the oceans of neighboring countries.

    Tritium, a radioactive material, is much smaller than a water molecule and has the same chemical properties, so it cannot be separated from water. This means that if it is released into the sea, it will contaminate marine life as it is.

    Tritium, which enters the body through food or air, such as ingestion of seafood, is fatal in that even a small amount can damage DNA. When tritium pushes out normal hydrogen in the human body and causes nuclide conversion, the gene is modified and cells are destroyed, causing various cancers or lowering reproductive function.

    There is concern that even if the concentration of pollution is lowered, the total amount will remain the same if released for a long period of time, adversely affecting the ecosystem.

    If anxiety grows, the economy may suffer, such as a sharp drop in fish consumption in the market and a slump in the fishery industry.

    Greenpeace, an international environmental group, suggested an alternative to storing tritium in a tank for a certain period of time and then releasing it when the level of contamination decreases, as the half-life of tritium radiation is halved by 12.3 years.

    However, despite this, the Japanese government insists on ocean discharge for reasons such as cost.

  3. The reason this Olympics was louder was because of the rising sun flag, a symbol of Japanese militarism and a 'war criminal flag'.  In particular, a rock wall shaped like a rising sun flag was installed at the climbing arena.

    The Japanese government is in a position to allow the Rising Sun flag at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.  They maintain the attitude that "they have no political intent and are merely a flag widely used in Japan."

    The Rising Sun Flag, which was the flag of the former Japanese Empire in the WorldWar II, is remembered as a “symbol of Japanese militarism” in Korea and China, which were victims of Japanese military aggression in the 20th century.  The Japanese government is using the flag symbolizing war crimes even though it has not paid due compensation to the victims and has not fully reflected on its own history.  In fact, the Rising Sun Flag is the flag of the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force, and is the flag used by far-right forces in Japan.

    For this reason, the South Korean government has criticized the “Rising Sun Flag as a flag of hatred.” An associate professor of history at the University of Hawaii, analyzed Japan's behavior, saying, "The current Japanese government has been neglecting the rise of extreme nationalist forces and has been using nationalist expressions politically."

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