Tokyo, May 28 (IANS) Japanese restaurants will be barred from serving raw pork, including specialities like pork-liver sashimi, owing to the risk it poses of hepatitis E or parasite infection, Efe news agency reported on Thursday.
The ban comes into effect from mid-July and also requires establishments to heat-sterilise pork.
The Japanese health ministry is concerned by the increase in pork-liver consumption since a series of food poisonings in 2012 precipitated a ban on raw beef liver.
In 2014, a total of 146 cases of hepatitis E were registered in Japan, against 55 in 2011, and the government attributes the increase to the consumption of raw pork.
Consuming raw or under-cooked pork also exposes people to the risk of parasite infections such as taeniosis.
The new law requires restaurants to serve only well-cooked pork.
Violation of the new law can result in punishment of up to two years in prison and fines of up to $16,112.