Cattle feed on straw which have been declared safe by the Fukushima prefectural government, at a farm in the town of Miharu, Fukushima Prefecture, 16 July 2011. Credit: Reuters / Kyodo

Reporting by Risa Maeda, editing by Jane Baird
18 July 2011 TOKYO (Reuters) – More than 500 beef cattle that ate feed contaminated by radioactive material from Fukushima have already shipped to other parts of Japan, an initial result of inspections on the area’s farms showed Monday. Separately, Yomiuri newspaper said Japan’s central government is expected to announce restrictions on shipments of beef cattle that might have eaten contaminated feed Tuesday at the earliest. Cases of contaminated vegetables, tea, milk, seafood and water have already stoked anxiety after the world’s worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl, despite assurances from officials that the levels are not dangerous. Fukushima Prefecture started on-site inspections after radioactive cesium three-to-six times higher than safety standards was found in beef cattle that a farmer in the north of the Fukushima Daiichi plant had shipped to Tokyo. The results of inspections on some 500 beef cattle farms, including those within the evacuation zone near the plant, showed that 14 farms had shipped 554 cattle that ate rice straw with radioactive cesium up to 500 times higher than safety standards. The cattle were shipped to 10 prefectures, including Tokyo and Hyogo in western Japan, between March 28 and July 13. The prefecture government’s sample test on locally produced beef failed to spot the contamination before the meat was shipped. […]

Fukushima: 554 cows fed contaminated feed shipped