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[Poisonous Oil in the Mouth: Japan's Largest Food Pollution Incident] Rice bran oil produced by Kanemi Warehouse in Kitakyushu, Fukuoka Prefecture, was contaminated with highly toxic dioxin and sold. A black baby was born. (Broadcast on May 27, 2019, "Poisonous Oil in the Mouth: 50 Years of the Kanemi Yusho Incident" won the 2019 Regional Era Film Festival Award) The "Kanemi Yusho Incident" was Japan's largest food pollution incident that occurred in 1968. Highly toxic dioxin contaminated rice bran oil produced by Kanemi Warehouse in Kitakyushu caused great health damage in the western part of Japan, mainly in Fukuoka and Nagasaki. At the time, about 14,000 people complained of the damage. Kanemi Yusho was an unprecedented incident in which dioxin was ingested orally, and the symptoms were diverse. Dioxin is also difficult to excrete from the body, so the health damage to the victims continues to this day. The government, which should have prevented the damage from spreading, failed in its initial response, exacerbating the damage, but because it was ultimately not found responsible in court, it is now extremely passive in its response to this issue. Furthermore, the certification system has resulted in many victims being cut off from relief as they have not been certified. The offending company, Kanemi Warehouse, is a small company, and the compensation it has provided is completely insufficient to save the victims. Furthermore, various health damages have also occurred to the next generation of children born to parents who were Yusho victims, and providing relief for them will be the biggest issue going forward. Half a century has passed since the Yusho incident began. Victims who are still suffering are being left behind.