Well, the obvious wasn't all that obvious.
Another source of Indonesian radioactive food has been discovered, this time it's cloves, a spice, and not seafood. Apparently, they have traced the contamination to recycled scrap metal products. Obviously, we have to attribute these cases to contaminated metal and not emissions from Fukushima (as important as that may be).
https://newstarget.com/2025-10-29-indone...upply.html
Another source of Indonesian radioactive food has been discovered, this time it's cloves, a spice, and not seafood. Apparently, they have traced the contamination to recycled scrap metal products. Obviously, we have to attribute these cases to contaminated metal and not emissions from Fukushima (as important as that may be).
Quote:Indonesia’s worsening RADIOACTIVE CONTAMINATION crisis threatens global food supply
. . . As the investigation deepens, a prime suspect has emerged: the international scrap metal trade. In a significant revelation, the Indonesian government has suspended all imports of scrap iron and steel. Environment Minister Hanif Faisol Nurofiq announced the move on social media, stating the ban would remain until the country's monitoring system for radioactive materials is fully strengthened.
This decision points to a terrifyingly plausible scenario. Globally, there have been numerous documented cases of orphaned radioactive sources – often from decommissioned medical or industrial equipment – being accidentally melted down with scrap metal.
These "lost" sources can contaminate entire batches of recycled metal. If such contaminated scrap was used to manufacture machinery or processing equipment in Indonesian food facilities, it could explain how the radioactivity is spreading to unrelated products like shrimp and cloves
https://newstarget.com/2025-10-29-indone...upply.html
A trail goes two ways and looks different in each direction - There is no such thing as a timid woodland creature - Whatever does not kill you leaves you a survivor - Jesus is NOT a bad word - MSB