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Hundreds of Miyagi residents seek equal compensation as Fukushima

National May. 22, 2013

TOKYO —

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Hundreds of people living just outside Fukushima Prefecture say they have been denied adequate compensation after the country’s 2011 nuclear disaster despite suffering elevated radiation levels.

Nearly 700 residents from Hippo district in Miyagi Prefecture, just northeast of Fukushima, filed a claim Tuesday with a government arbitration office demanding that they be given the same compensation as residents of Fukushima.

The government’s basic compensation scheme only covers Fukushima residents, which critics say is an attempt to minimize costs.

The Hippo residents said some radiation levels in their area exceeded those in Fukushima towns. Hippo district is about 50 kilometers northwest of the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.

They demanded that the plant’s operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co, pay them an additional 70 million yen in damages.

Due to the huge costs of compensation and cleanup of the plant, TEPCO has declared bankruptcy and is under state control. The compensation money paid by TEPCO actually comes from the government.

Radiation levels in Hippo district are comparable to areas in Fukushima subject to voluntary evacuation, where residents are entitled to receive up to 720,000 yen for every child and pregnant woman, and up to 120,000 yen per adult. After months of negotiations, TEPCO has agreed to pay Hippo residents about half the Fukushima amount.

“We in Marumori town have been exposed to as much radiation as our peers in Fukushima, or even more depending on the area,” said Takeo Hikichi, 71, who represents the claimants. “We cannot accept the kind of compensation scheme that discriminates against us just because of the prefectural border.”

Residents of areas just outside of Fukushima say they also face discrimination in legal protection. They say health checks, radiation monitoring and cleanup projects in most cases do not go beyond the prefectural border.

“Damages from the nuclear accident do not stop at the border. We hope that the compensation program is carried out in a way that reflects the reality of people’s lives,” said Koji Otani, a lawyer representing the residents.

Although the amount sought by each resident is small, the group hopes to be able to set a precedent, he said.

A massive earthquake and tsunami hit the Fukushima plant, knocking out its cooling systems and causing the cores of three reactors to melt and release radioactivity into the air and water. The radiation level in Hippo exceeded the annual limit for nuclear workers.

So far, TEPCO has paid 2.3 trillion yen, about half of it to companies and business owners. That amount includes 1.6 million individual claims, mostly from voluntary evacuees. Because the amount of claims is expected to exceed the initial estimate of 3 trillion yen, the government has injected an additional 154 billion yen into the compensation fund.

About 150,000 Fukushima residents are still displaced. Hundreds have filed claims seeking greater compensation.

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May 23, 2013 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Obituary: Lynda Pugh; Feminist, socialist, anti nuclear and troops out campaigner,

‘To leave the world a better place and to know that even one life has breathed easier because you have lived… this is to have succeeded.’

 

Obituary: Lynda Pugh; feminist, socialist, anti nuclear and troops out campaigner, pioneer in women’s aid who helped set up the first refuge in Birmingham.

Lynda Pugh

During the 1980s, Lynda was a member of Women Oppose the Nuclear Threat (WONT) and was a regular at Greenham Common in Berkshire: blockading entrances, cutting perimeter fences and being hauled away by the police. She later sold her wire cutters for charity.

Image and comment source ; http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2013/may/08/lynda-pugh-obituary

Lynda Pugh, who has died of cancer aged 64, was a political and social campaigner who strove to improve the lives of others. She was involved with many different causes and made many friends through her passion for social justice and her sense of fun.

Daughter of Doris and Kinsey Pugh, Lynda was born in Wolverhampton and went to Wolverhampton girls’ high school. While studying to be a librarian, she realised she preferred people to the Dewey decimal system, and retrained as a social worker. She qualified at the end of the 70s and spent most of her subsequent career in Birmingham, working with children in care.

Political and social issues played an important part in Lynda’s life. In many ways she was a pioneer, and was involved with establishing pregnancy testing through the Birmingham Women’s Centre. She also helped set up the first Women’s Aid refuge in the city and later became a board member.

During the 1980s, Lynda was a member of Women Oppose the Nuclear Threat (WONT) and was a regular at Greenham Common in Berkshire: blockading entrances, cutting perimeter fences and being hauled away by the police. She later sold her wire cutters for charity.

She was involved in many Irish freedom campaigns such as the Troops Out and Women in Ireland movements. She visited Irish prisoners and picketed army barracks and police stations. More recently Lynda joined the Palestinian Solidarity Campaign – continuing to help run its city centre stall well into her illness.

Lynda had wide cultural interests, and introduced many of her friends to the arts – often paying for events they might not have thought of attending themselves. She was also a keen potter and walker. A lifelong Guardian reader, she was thrilled to very occasionally complete the cryptic crossword.

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May 23, 2013 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment