
Recently, a restaurant in Osaka, Japan, posted a Chinese-language notice at the entrance of its store saying that Chinese customers were not allowed to patronize the restaurant, sparking a hot debate. According to a Japanese media report quoted by the Global Times, the restaurant holding group SASAYA, to which the store in question belongs, issued a bilingual statement on its official website on May 12, "sincerely apologizing" for the incident.
According to the statement, the person in charge of the operation of the company's restaurants had posted a sign saying that certain foreign customers were not allowed to enter without the company's permission, and the company had removed the sign at the first opportunity. The company apologizes for any inconvenience caused by this notice.
Currently, information on "Sumibi Yakitori Hayashin" stores is no longer available on the SASAYA website.
Related News:
Earthquake predictions shake Japan's tourism, bookings plummet
Comment