nuclear-news

The News That Matters about the Nuclear Industry Fukushima Chernobyl Mayak Three Mile Island Atomic Testing Radiation Isotope

The second court of appeal in the Children’s De-exposure Trial

February 15, 2022

The “Children’s De-exposure Trial” for the Fukushima nuclear accident was held at the Sendai High Court on February 14. This is the second time the court has heard the case since the appeal trial began in October last year.

In order to protect their children from radiation exposure, parents and children in Fukushima are suing the government, Fukushima Prefecture, Fukushima City and other local governments. In March last year, the Fukushima District Court ruled that the parents and children lost the case. The case has been moved to the Sendai High Court. The related article on this site is at the end of this article.

Imagine how unbearable it must be!

 At the second court session held on the 14th, what attracted me (Uneri) the most was the statement by Mr. A, the plaintiff (who was living in Fukushima at the time of the accident). The words of people who lived in Fukushima at the time of the accident have a strong appeal to the listeners. It is a long text, but I am hesitant to cut it down, so I will introduce it in a slightly abbreviated form.

Statement of Opinion by Plaintiff Male A

My name is A. I am a plaintiff. I would like to talk about a basic misconception about the nuclear accident.
There is a common misconception that an unprecedented earthquake and unexpected tsunami caused an unexpected nuclear accident. But this is a big misunderstanding. Accidents at nuclear power plants caused by earthquakes and tsunamis were predicted, and because of this, seismic reinforcement and work to raise the seawalls were carried out, and accidents at some plants were avoided (Tokai Daini Nuclear Power Plant, for example).
Because nuclear accidents were anticipated, the measures to be taken in the event of an accident were also determined in detail. After the JCO accident in 1999, these measures were compiled into a series of laws called "nuclear disaster prevention," which culminated in the Act on Special Measures Concerning Nuclear Emergency Preparedness.
What I would like to argue is the fact that the government and Fukushima Prefecture did not follow these procedures and forced us, the residents, to be exposed to radiation. The SPEEDI (System for Prediction of the Effects of Emergency Radioactivity) data, which was up and running less than two hours after the earthquake and should have been used for emergency evacuation, was not made public until March 23, 2011, more than 10 days after the nuclear accident. The Nuclear Safety Technology Center (NSTC), which was managing SPEEDI at the time, sent more than 30 faxes to the Fukushima prefectural government in the morning of March 13, 2011, as well as email attachments from late at night on March 11, but the prefecture still did not release this data either. Fukushima Prefecture explained that they could not release the data because they did not have information on the source of the emissions, but this explanation is completely unreasonable. This is because the guidelines for dealing with the accident ("Guidelines for Environmental Radiation Monitoring in Emergencies") included a response plan for cases where there was no source information.
It is not only about predicting the diffusion of radioactive materials. In terms of actual measurements, information was concealed and data acquisition was obstructed. From the morning of the day after the earthquake, the staff of the Fukushima Nuclear Energy Center went to the vicinity of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant to take actual measurements of radioactive materials released into the environment, following the "guidelines" mentioned above. On March 12, five monitoring sites were monitored, and on March 13, ten sites were monitored, but then the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology stopped the monitoring, according to a person who was involved in the monitoring at the time. As a result, the actual measurements from March 14 to 17, when the contamination caused by the nuclear accident was most serious, are missing.
As a result, the residents of the affected areas were left without being informed of the massive spread of radioactive materials, the fact that the plant had melted down, or how to evacuate. In other words, the purpose of nuclear disaster prevention, which is to protect the residents from radiation exposure, could not be achieved due to the inaction and interference of the government. This is why we claim that we were forced to suffer unnecessary radiation exposure.
At the end of March 2011, the Fukushima Prefectural Board of Education decided to start classes at schools in the prefecture from April 6 to 8 without measuring radiation levels, and in early April, the Nuclear Safety Commission began to consider whether the exposure limit for residents in areas with high radiation levels should be raised from 1 millisievert to 20 millisievert per year. On April 10, it was reported that the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) is planning to set the annual exposure limit for students at 20 millisieverts. On April 10, it was reported that the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology is planning to set an annual exposure limit of 20 millisieverts for children, which means that this standard will be applied even to children in order to prevent the expansion of the evacuation zone.
In this way, the government and Fukushima Prefecture hid information and prevented residents from evacuating at the beginning of the nuclear accident, and later, when it became clear how serious the contamination was, they raised the radiation dose limits for residents (instead of expanding the evacuation zone). Needless to say, all of these actions were against the law, against justice, against international common sense, and against humanism.
As a result, everyone in the disaster area, myself included, did not know how much radiation we had been exposed to, and thus we spent the first ten years of the accident with health concerns. Whenever I had a prolonged cold, a sore throat, or a lumpy feeling, I would think, "What if this is ......? You can imagine how unbearable these days are. In the affected areas, there are many people who are sincerely worried about the health and future of their children, but are unable to speak out about it. Who has created such a society? Wasn't it created by those who turn a blind eye to acts that are against the law, against justice, against international common sense, and against humanism?
In response to this situation, isn't it time to remove the unreasonable things that have been imposed on the disaster area and change the injustice? I sincerely and earnestly hope that the court will make an appropriate decision.
Plaintiff A's statement of opinion

 It was a very impressive statement. To “imagine” the unbearable suffering of people. It is something that we all need to keep in mind.

At the meeting after the trial

 At a meeting held in Sendai City after the court session, there was a briefing on the “3/11 Children’s Thyroid Cancer Trial,” which was filed in the Tokyo District Court last month. Ken’ichi Ido, a lawyer for “De-exposure of Children” is also involved in this trial.

On January 27th, six young men between the ages of 17 and 27 who were living in Fukushima Prefecture at the time of the accident filed a lawsuit against TEPCO, claiming damages. The reason for their claim is that their thyroid cancer was caused by radiation exposure. They were between 6 and 16 years old at the time of the accident. All of them have undergone surgery. Four of them had recurrences and had to have surgery again. Four of them have had their thyroid glands completely removed and have been forced to take hormones for the rest of their lives. Four of them have had total thyroidectomies and will have to take hormones for the rest of their lives. One of them has also been diagnosed with metastasis to the lungs, and we don't know what will happen to him. This is the situation. Since nearly 300 cases of thyroid cancer have already been found in Fukushima Prefecture, which should have been one or two cases per one million people per year, we will fight the case on the grounds that the only possible cause is radiation exposure.

The theory of over-diagnosis and various other arguments have been used to say that there is no causal relationship between cancer and exposure. (The prefectural residents' health survey review committee and UNSCEAR (United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation) have issued such opinions. In response to this, there has already been a bashing movement, saying, "Don't file a lawsuit if exposure is not the cause. However, if the causal relationship is denied here, all of the various cancers and health hazards that are actually occurring will be denied. The fiction that the government is trying to create, that "there was no health damage at all" despite the fact that so much radiation was released by the nuclear accident, will be accepted. I believe that this is a trial that we cannot lose.

It takes a lot of courage to go to court now, and the six young people took their time and consulted with their families before making their decision. The reason for their decision is partly because they are worried about their own future, but also because nearly 300 young people are living with the same kind of suffering and anxiety. These people are being torn apart, so they have a strong desire to give courage and encouragement to these people. I think that's where he made his decision in the end.
Attorney Ido

The “Thyroid Cancer Trial” is a trial in which people who have unfortunately been diagnosed with thyroid cancer hold Tokyo Electric Power Company responsible for their condition. The “Children’s De-exposure” is an appeal for the right to protect children to the maximum extent possible to prevent them from getting such diseases. Both are very important. We need to pay attention to them.

 At the meeting, the lawyers also pointed out the recent “very unconscionable thing” that happened. I have not been able to introduce it on this site, so I will write about it here.

Former Prime Ministers’ EU letter issue

In a letter to the European Commission, five former prime ministers, including Junichiro Koizumi, Naoto Kan, and Tomiichi Murayama, wrote that “many children are suffering from thyroid cancer (due to the nuclear accident). The government and Fukushima Prefecture are protesting vehemently against this.

In a letter to the European Commission, he wrote, "Many children are suffering from thyroid cancer (due to the nuclear accident). It is not appropriate."
Reconstruction Minister Nishimei

The prefectural government and Fukushima Prefecture are fiercely protesting against the report. We have written to you to request that you provide us with objective information based on scientific findings."
Governor Uchibori

How do you see this trend? At the post-court meeting, Mr. Ido said

It reminded me of the attack on "Yummy Shinbo". In the end, by bashing the "nosebleeds" in "Yummy Shinbo," people couldn't talk about the fact that many children had nosebleeds. Such a social atmosphere was created to erase the nosebleeds as a fact. I think that the powers that be want to make the thyroid cancer case a success story like the one they had at that time. However, it is inconceivable that there is no health hazard after such a huge accident. We need to appeal this fact at every opportunity. We must not allow the facts to disappear.

 I agree. Uneri Unera also strongly protests. In the prefectural health survey, thyroid cancer was found in more than 250 people, and more than 200 operations were performed to remove it. It must be true that “many children are suffering from thyroid cancer. The only basis for Uchibori’s opinion that “the prefectural health survey shows no link between cancer and radiation exposure” is that “we have not been able to find a clear link between the two at this time. The only basis for the view that “there is no link between cancer and radiation exposure” is that “we have not been able to find a clear link between the two at this time.” In my opinion, it is much more factual to point out that “many people are suffering” rather than to argue forcefully that there is no link.

 There are many people for whom it is more convenient to say that there were no health problems caused by the Fukushima accident. There are many people who would be better off if it were stated that there were no health problems caused by the Fukushima accident. Even ordinary people who have lived in the Tokyo metropolitan area, such as myself, might feel more comfortable if they knew that there was no such thing. This is because the responsibility of living in a society that has been promoting nuclear power plants without actively resisting them would be lessened.

 However, in the case of the sensitive subject of low-dose exposure, the moment we give in to the temptation to say that there was no damage, we will lose sight of all the actual damage. Until the day comes when we can say, “There really was no damage to our health” (unfortunately, I don’t think that day will ever come), I think we should focus on the fact that there are people who are actually suffering and worried.

It’s OK to be scared, to cry, to be angry

 At the end of the meeting, a different plaintiff from the one who gave an opinion in court took the microphone. She is a woman who has raised two children in Fukushima. I would like to end this report with her words.

When we filed the lawsuit in August 2014, my second son said, "Mom, I want to take a day off from school to say something," and spoke at the meeting. The son who spoke at that time is now 15 years old. He has been sick since he was in the fifth grade and is now in the third grade. He will take the entrance exam this year, but he only went to junior high school for the first semester. I don't know if it was because of the radiation. I don't know if it is because of the radiation or not, but he used to be fine, but now he is like that. As I mentioned earlier about the nosebleeds, both my first and second sons had many nosebleeds at that time, and I had to move left and right. I was really scared and didn't know what to do. I was really frustrated when we lost the case in Fukushima, and I am determined not to lose in Sendai. It's okay to be scared, to cry, to be angry. So that one day we can laugh at the end. I would like to make this happen.
One of the plaintiffs

 The next court date has been set for May 18.

February 17, 2022 Posted by | Fuk 2022 | , | Leave a comment

The Second Oral Argument of the Appeal Court at the Sendai High Court – At the previous date, the representative of the plaintiffs said, “The Fukushima District Court should make a proper decision on the issue of radiation exposure.

February 14, 2022

The second oral session of the “Children’s De-exposure Trial” was held on February 14, 2012. This case squarely questioned the risk of radiation exposure in Fukushima Prefecture after the nuclear accident and the negligence of the government. The second oral argument will be held on the afternoon of February 14 in Courtroom 101 of the Sendai High Court (Presiding Judge Masako Ishiguri). In the first oral argument held in October last year, Sumio Konno, the representative of the plaintiffs, made a statement. Sumio Konno, the representative of the plaintiffs, made a statement at the first oral argument in October last year, saying, “I hope the court will make a bloody decision on the issue of radiation and safe education for children. Please make a proper decision on the issues that the Fukushima District Court has thoroughly evaded. This summer marks eight years since the lawsuit was filed. This summer marks eight years since the lawsuit was filed, and a series of lawsuits will continue to be filed in Sendai, accusing the government and local governments of negligence in dealing with radiation exposure caused by the nuclear accident, including the health risks of low-dose radiation exposure and the dangers of internal exposure to insoluble radioactive particles.

My son ate snow in Tsushima.
 The Fukushima District Court’s decision to deny the dangers and concerns of radiation and the future of our children, which we have been advocating, by simply following the arguments of the government and Fukushima Prefecture, filled us with frustration and emptiness.
 I want the court to make a bloody decision on the issue of radiation and children’s safety education. Please make a proper decision on the issues that the Fukushima District Court has thoroughly evaded.
 On behalf of the plaintiffs in the first trial, Ms. Konno made a statement in the courtroom of the Sendai High Court.
 More than seven years have passed since the lawsuit was filed, and many of the child plaintiffs have graduated from junior high school without having the opportunity to receive education in a safe place or compensation. The remaining child plaintiffs will be graduating in March of the next year. During this period, some of the plaintiffs had to withdraw their complaints due to various reasons. Some of the plaintiffs’ mothers, out of desperation, evacuated with their children to safer places where they could receive their education.
 At the time, I was working alone at the Onagawa Nuclear Power Plant (Miyagi Prefecture). He was working alone at the Onagawa Nuclear Power Plant in Miyagi Prefecture at the time, and his wife and children, who were living in Namie Town, evacuated to the Tsushima area like other townspeople. He later found out that the evacuation, which was supposed to be a way to escape the risk of radiation exposure, was actually a move to a more contaminated area.
 My son, who was five years old at the time of the nuclear accident, was evacuated from the early morning of March 12 to the early morning of March 15, 2011, to the gymnasium of Tsushima High School in the Tsushima district of Namie Town. The area was highly contaminated due to the flow of radioactive plumes and is still designated as a difficult-to-return area. My son told me that he rolled up snow and ate it as ice cream. When I heard that story, I was shocked.
 About half a year later, my son began to have a cold-like illness that lasted for about two years. I visited the hospital twice a month. The doctor said, ‘It’s a lowered immune system. If the town of Namie had been informed of the SPEEDI information at that time, they would have evacuated further away from the Tsushima area. I had exposed my son to radiation…. I am frustrated and angry with Fukushima Prefecture. Even now, only Fukushima residents are forced to be exposed to 20 millisieverts of radiation per year.
 Since the accident at the nuclear power plant, Ms. Konno has consistently said, “Children cannot protect themselves. The frustration of not being able to protect her own children from the risk of radiation exposure is a feeling shared by the plaintiffs in the first trial.
 It is up to us adults to protect our children. It’s our responsibility as adults. It is our minimum duty as adults.

Sumio Konno, speaking on behalf of the plaintiffs at the first trial. I want the court to make a bloody decision on the issue of radiation and children’s safety education.

(“We should avoid unnecessary radiation exposure.”)
 The lawyers outlined their reasons for the appeal.

 Lawyer Ido
 The “School Environmental Hygiene Standards” do not include any standards for radioactive materials. There should be a standard for radiation exposure, and the fact that there is not is negligence on the part of the government. Children should be protected from radiation exposure at the level of environmental standards. I would like the court to make a straightforward judgment. It is true that the air dose has gone down, but the concentration of soil contamination will not go down easily. Most of the radioactive cesium in the soil is made up of insoluble fine particles. If these particles are taken into the body and internal exposure occurs, the biological half-life is thought to be as long as several decades, posing a serious danger. Using children as guinea pigs is unacceptable. Unnecessary radiation exposure that can be avoided should be avoided. In its written reply, the government claims that ‘exposure to about 1 millisievert per year is not worthy of legal protection. We hope that the court will reaffirm the natural principle that radiation exposure should be avoided whenever possible.

 Koichi Mitsumae, Attorney at Law
 The main issue in this lawsuit is how to measure the amount of radiation that the people of Fukushima have been exposed to as a result of the nuclear accident, and how to consider the effects of low-dose internal exposure on their health. It is extremely important that the results of the prefectural health survey be verified based on fair science. The degree of nondisclosure of information regarding the results of the survey is appalling. We call for a full hearing, including the examination of expert witnesses.
 
 Attorney Kenzo Furukawa
 ”Should we evacuate or stay indoors? What should we eat and what should we drink? What should we eat and drink? The most important thing to make the right decision is accurate information. However, the decision of the first instance court was based on abstract theory and made no decision, allowing the government and Fukushima prefecture to hide information. In Namie Town, neither the national government nor the Fukushima Prefecture provided SPEEDI information, which led to the evacuation of many townspeople to the Tsushima area, where radiation doses were high, forcing them to be exposed to unnecessary radiation. If only the government and Fukushima Prefecture had provided the SPEEDI information, there are still people who would not have been exposed to radiation. The decision of the first trial must be fundamentally revised.

 Yasuo Tanabe, Attorney at Law
 The ICRP’s 2007 recommendation of a reference level of up to 20 millisieverts per year is unacceptable from the perspective of protecting the lives and health of children. The fact that Fukushima Prefecture decided to reopen schools prior to the April 19, 2011 notice by the Ministry of Education clearly exposed children to radiation doses that were several times higher at the very least. I hope the court will decide whether the government and Fukushima Prefecture acted illegally from the perspective of protecting the residents from radiation exposure.

 Attorney Toshio Yanagihara
 Until March 11, 2011, the Japanese government and legal system were completely unprepared for the consequences of the nuclear accident. “The Japanese government and legal system were completely unprepared for the nuclear accident until March 11, 2011, and even after the nuclear accident, the case has been left unresolved.
 The court should make a correct judgment on the illegality of the orders and recommendations issued by the government, based on the basic premise that the plaintiffs in the first trial were sovereign citizens of this country and the subjects of human rights before and after the nuclear accident.

 Shin-Yi Choi, Attorney at Law
 After the nuclear power plant accident, the government’s policy has been based on ’20 millisieverts per year. The government has submitted a joint opinion as a theoretical basis that there is no proven health risk for radiation exposure of up to 100 millisieverts per year. On the other hand, the court of first instance did not take into account the risk of internal radiation exposure, especially insoluble radioactive particles. We hope that the appellate court will address this point head-on.

Ken’ichi Ido, a lawyer, has consistently stressed that “unnecessary radiation exposure that can be avoided should be avoided.

In the first trial, the court ruled that there was no danger of radiation exposure.
 The “Children’s De-exposure Trial” was filed on August 29, 2014, and two lawsuits have been heard together.
 One is an “administrative lawsuit” (commonly known as the Children’s Human Rights Lawsuit).
 The first is an “administrative lawsuit” (commonly known as the Children’s Rights Lawsuit), in which public elementary and junior high school children in Fukushima Prefecture (plaintiffs) demand that cities and towns in Fukushima Prefecture (defendants) provide education in facilities that are safe in terms of radiation exposure.
 The other is the “lawsuit for state compensation” (commonly known as the “parent-child lawsuit”).
 The parents and children who were living in Fukushima Prefecture on March 11, 2011 demanded that the government and Fukushima Prefecture implement “five unreasonable measures” (1) concealing necessary information such as SPEEDI and monitoring results, (2) not allowing the children to take stable iodine pills, (3) reopening schools under the standard of 20 mSv per year, which is 20 times the limit of radiation exposure for the general public, and (4) not allowing the children to go to school after the accident. (3) reopening schools at 20 mSv/year, which was 20 times the limit of radiation exposure for the general public, (4) not allowing children to evacuate en masse when they should have done so at the beginning of the accident, and (5) using Mr. Shunichi Yamashita and others to promote false safety information.
 On March 4, 2020, they realized the witness examination of Shunichi Yamashita (Professor at Nagasaki University and Vice President of Fukushima Medical University), who was appointed as the “Radiation Health Risk Management Advisor” for Fukushima Prefecture immediately after the nuclear accident.
 However, on March 1 last year, the Fukushima District Court (presiding judge: Toji Endo) dismissed the plaintiffs’ case in its entirety and handed down a judgment dismissing the case.
 Regarding the demand that education be conducted in facilities with a safe environment, Judge Endo ruled that “the 20 mSv/year standard cannot be considered immediately unreasonable,” that “it is not sufficient to find that the increase in cases of thyroid cancer discovered through thyroid examinations (Prefectural Health Survey) is due to the effects of radiation caused by the nuclear accident in question,” and that “the It is possible to carry out education at the public junior high schools attended by the plaintiffs while decontamination and remediation measures are taken,” and “It cannot be said that there is any illegality in deviating from or abusing the discretionary authority of the Board of Education, nor can it be said that there is any concrete risk of exposure to radiation to a degree that would adversely affect the maintenance of human health. The court dismissed the case, saying, “Since it is not recognized that there is a concrete risk of exposure to radiation to a degree that would adversely affect human health, it is not recognized that there is an illegal violation of the plaintiffs’ moral rights pertaining to their lives and bodies.
 Kenichi Ido, the head of the defense team, posted the following message on his website before the second oral argument.
 In this brief, we will present the criteria for abuse and derogation in the exercise of administrative power and argue that the exercise of discretionary power by the government and Fukushima Prefecture that exceeds these criteria is illegal and invalid beyond the permissible range. We will also present the method of interpretation of international human rights law that should serve as the standard for the exercise of discretionary power. In addition, I will argue against the claims of the State and Fukushima Prefecture, especially against the State’s claim that the benefit of not being exposed to 1 millisievert per year is not worthy of legal protection. The father, one of the appellants, is also scheduled to give an opinion. The argument will reach its climax. I ask for your attention.
http://taminokoeshimbun.blog.fc2.com/blog-entry-595.html?fbclid=IwAR2MxmccoLNchTmjs-KEfAnUI-MO5LjYKhU4t1MfbmoNztymfNiFEHszhR8

February 17, 2022 Posted by | Fuk 2022 | , | Leave a comment

Kenichi Hasegawa, former dairy farmer who continued to tell the truth about the nuclear accident in Fukushima, passes away.

Immediately after the accident, I pressed the village mayor to disclose information.
He also shared the voice of a dairy farmer friend who committed suicide.

 Mr. Kenichi Hasegawa, a former dairy farmer who continued to appeal about the current situation in Iitate Village contaminated by radiation after the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant accident in 2011, died of thyroid cancer on October 22, 2011 at the age of 68. He was 68 years old. He was the co-chairman of Hidanren, a group of victims of the nuclear power plant accident, and the head of the group of Iitate villagers who filed for alternative dispute resolution (ADR). Since 2005, he has been focusing on growing buckwheat noodles in the village, while criticizing what the government and administration call “reconstruction projects” and “reconstruction Olympics. In February and March of this year, he was diagnosed with cancer and fell ill. Many people are saddened by the death of Mr. Hasegawa, who continued to communicate the issues of the nuclear accident both inside and outside Japan.

Mr. Hasegawa at the time, when he was the head of the community association of temporary housing.

 On January 13, 2012, prior to the Global Conference for a Nuclear Power Free World held in Yokohama, NGO officials and journalists from overseas visited Fukushima and Mr. Hasegawa conveyed the current situation of the Iitate villagers. He said, “I wish there were no nuclear power plants. He said, “I wish we didn’t have nuclear power plants, and I hope the remaining dairy farmers will do their best not to be defeated by nuclear power plants. He left a message that said, ‘I have lost the will to work.

Our government has been promoting nuclear power plants as a national policy, so I thought they would take proper measures when an accident occurred. But the government did not take any action. I may return to my village, but I can’t bring my grandchildren back. If we go back and end our lives, that will be the end of the village.

 Paul Saoke, a Kenyan public health specialist and then secretary general of the Kenya chapter of the International Council for the Prevention of Nuclear War, recorded Hasegawa’s lecture on his iPad. Mr. Saoke said, “In Kenya, the Fukushima nuclear accident is almost unknown. When I return to Japan, I would like to have the media watch the video of my lecture and let them know what kind of damage is being done by the residents. Mr. Hasegawa’s appeal was posted on the Internet and quickly spread around the world.

In 2012, he gave a speech at the European Parliament.
The film “My Legacy: If Only There Were No Nuclear Power Plants

In 2012, Mr. Hasegawa gave a lecture at the European Parliament in Belgium on the one-year anniversary of the Fukushima nuclear accident. Mr. Hasegawa visited Europe with his wife Hanako, and together with Eisaku Sato, former Governor of Fukushima Prefecture, conveyed the current situation in Fukushima.

Kenichi Hasegawa (center) attended the symposium held at the EU headquarters in Belgium. Kenichi Hasegawa (center) attended a symposium at the EU headquarters in Belgium with his wife Hanako (left) and former Fukushima Governor Eisaku Sato (second from right) (March 2012)

Our Iitate village was a beautiful village,” said Mr. Hasegawa. “Our Iitate village was a beautiful village,” Mr. Hasegawa began. While explaining how the government experts who came to the village kept saying that the village was safe, he said, “The villagers were exposed to radiation while the mayor and the people in the village administration clung to the village. We dairy farmers were told not to raise cows in the planned evacuation zone, and with no follow-up from the government, prefecture, or village, we made the decision to quit dairy farming on our own. Finally, I conveyed the regret of my friend who committed suicide, leaving behind a note saying, “If only there were no nuclear power plants.

A view of a pasture in Iitate Village (2011).
Photo: Hideaki Takamatsu

 In 2002, Naomi Toyoda’s film “The Last Will and Testament: If Only There Were No Nuclear Power Plants” was completed, and Mr. Hasegawa’s words and the events of his friend who committed suicide were further disseminated to society. Yasuhiro Abe, manager of the Forum Fukushima movie theater, said, “At the time, various debates were boiling in the local community, and despite the length of the film, it was fully booked for three days. Mr. Hasegawa’s words about Iitate were very human, and he had a different level of strength that no one else had.

Through his activities in Japan and abroad, Mr. Hasegawa has connected and interacted with a wide range of people.

Mr. Toshiyuki Takeuchi, the president of Fukushima Global Citizen’s Information Center (FUKUDEN), who has been informing people in Japan and abroad about Mr. Hasegawa’s activities, said, “Mr. Hasegawa is a person who has been affected by pollution. Mr. Hasegawa has been active as an anti-nuclear and anti-radiation activist, criticizing the government, the administration (village authorities), and TEPCO for failing to take appropriate measures that put the health of the residents of the contaminated area first. At the same time, he has a strong attachment to the Maeda area and his life there, and has returned to the area to start making soba noodles and rebuild his life. The complexity of his feelings (“irrationality”) was sometimes difficult to convey to people overseas.

 As I listened to Mr. Hasegawa’s story, there were many moments when I felt that “everything was there in Iitate Village and Maeda area before the earthquake, and it was the center of the world and life. “Complex irrationality” is probably a cross-section of the tragedy of everything being taken away on its own.

Solidarity with the Nuclear Weapons Abolition Movement
Bringing together people from all walks of life

 In 2007, after the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, ICAN Co-Chairman Tilman Ruff (Australia) and ICAN International Steering Committee member and Peace Boat Co-Chairman Satoshi Kawasaki visited Mr. Hasegawa’s house in Iitate Village with medals.

Mr Hasegawa with ICAN Co-Chairman Tillman Ruff, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate

 Mr. Ruff said. He refused to be cowed or silenced, and continued to speak the truth about the nuclear disaster in Fukushima, stressing the need for rights, dignity, health, and recognition of the people and land that the government and TEPCO unreasonably put in harm’s way. I am honored to have known Kenichi and to have been able to work for a common cause.”
 Mr. Kawasaki also mourns his death. Mr. Kawasaki also mourned his passing. “We were together on many occasions, including the European Parliament in Belgium in 2012, the round trip to Australia in 2013, and the Peace Boat trip. I remember the way he spoke straight from the bottom of his heart about the damage he had suffered as a dairy farmer and the anger and frustration of the people of Fukushima, strongly conveying his message to people even though they spoke different languages. I believe that Ms. Hanako, who has always accompanied us and talked about the damage caused by nuclear power plants from her own perspective, will continue to play a role as a sender.
 Ms. Riko Mutoh (Funehiki), who is also a co-chair of Hidanren, said, “Ms. Hasegawa was a big presence. His words were powerful and persuasive. After returning to Iitate Village, she was busy with local activities. He was a person who brought people together, both inside and outside of the village, within and outside of the prefecture, those who had evacuated and those who were living there.
(Text and photo by Hiroko Aihara)

https://bigissue-online.jp/archives/1079955886.html?fbclid=IwAR2Zp3hwEsFNi-SLRmnbEyzgo-z_wlQYTRyAk-48Qfms4wAXQf2md86Hxls

February 13, 2022 Posted by | Fuk 2022 | , , , , , | Leave a comment

Taiwan lifts Fukushima food ban as it looks to Japan for trade pact support

The island will ease restrictions to allow in produce from five Japanese prefectures more than a decade after the nuclear disaster.

Decision will help smooth the way for Taiwan’s bid to join the CPTPP, Cabinet spokesman says.

Taiwan is relaxing restrictions on Japanese food imports.

8 Feb, 2022

Taiwan will largely lift a ban on some Japanese food imports imposed after the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster as it seeks closer cooperation with Tokyo.

Citing the need to join global trade pacts, including the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), the island’s government announced on Tuesday it would conditionally lift the ban on food from Fukushima and four other Japanese prefectures later this month.

“For 11 years, Japan has imposed restrictive measures even more stringent than international standards to reduce the risk in relation to food, leading to more than 40 countries, including the 11 member states of the CPTPP to fully lift the ban on related Japanese food imports,” Cabinet spokesman Lo Ping-cheng said.

Lo said many European countries had also relaxed their bans or required radiation-free certificates for the imports.

“All over the world today, only Taiwan and China maintain the ban, and even Hong Kong and Macau have partially lifted the ban,” he said.

Lo said that after years of reviews and consultations with food experts and scientists as well as examination of international standards and practices, the island finally decided to conditionally remove the ban.

Under the plan, food from Fukushima, Gunma, Chiba, Ibaraki and Tochigi prefectures will be allowed in but aquatic products, tea, and dairy products will require proof that they are radiation-free and have certificates of origin.

General bans on wildlife meats, mushrooms and certain kinds of vegetables will remain in place.

Lo said the removal would help smooth the way for the island’s bid to join the CPTPP, which requires high standards for membership.

“For Taiwan to take part in the world trade and economic system and to join the high-standard CPTPP, we need to meet international criteria and refrain from ignoring scientific proof,” he said, adding Taiwan had discussed the issue many times with Japan and must remove unreasonable obstacles if it wants to join the Asia-Pacific trade body.

But he also stressed that the removal was not part of a deal in exchange for Japan’s support on CPTPP entry, though it would help the island’s bid.

John Deng, Taiwan’s top trade negotiator, said Taiwan applied to join the CPTPP last year and through its overseas representative offices or bilateral trade meetings, it had sought support from the 11 member states – Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, and Vietnam.

He said the CPTPP’s review committee had yet to examine Taiwan’s application because it had been busy with Britain’s membership bid over the past year.

Meanwhile, Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen said on her Facebook account on Tuesday that her government would not neglect the health concerns of the public and would uphold food safety on the island.

The main opposition party, the Kuomintang, however, blasted the Tsai government for ignoring public opinion that the food products be banned.

The decision comes despite a 2018 referendum that supported the 2011 ban.

Observers said the decision had more to do with the island’s hopes of winning security and military support from Japan to counter growing threats from Beijing.

“Participation in the CPTPP is a reason, but more importantly, Tsai wants to use the measure to befriend Japan so that it will join the United States to help defend Taiwan in the event of a potential cross-strait conflict,” said Wang Kung-yi, director of the Taiwan International Strategic Study Society, a Taipei-based think tank.

He said Tsai had done all she could to seek support from the US.

Wang said Tsai had also tried hard to cement ties with Japan to counter the mainland especially after former Japanese prime minister Abe Shinzo said any mainland Chinese attack against Taiwan, either direct or indirect, would affect Japan’s national security.

Beijing considers Taiwan its territory that must control, by force if necessary. It has warned the US and Japan – which both recognise the mainland diplomatically – against military and official support for the island.

https://www.scmp.com/news/china/diplomacy/article/3166245/taiwan-lifts-fukushima-food-ban-it-looks-japan-trade-pact

February 10, 2022 Posted by | Fuk 2022 | , , | Leave a comment

Japan halts shipment of black rockfish caught off Fukushima over radiation

Workers sort fishes after a fishing operation at Matsukawaura fishing port in Soma, Fukushima prefecture, Japan April 12, 2021, in this photo taken by Kyodo. Picture taken April 12, 2021.

February 8, 2022

TOKYO, Feb 8 (Reuters) – Japan’s health ministry said on Tuesday it had ordered the suspension of shipments of black rockfish caught off Fukushima prefecture after radiation exceeding an upper limit was detected in a catch late last month.

The development comes on the heels of an announcement by Taiwan that it would relax a ban on food imports from Japan put in place after the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster.

The suspension means the targetted fish would not be shipped, regardless of the destination, a ministry official said.

https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/japan-halts-shipment-black-rockfish-caught-off-fukushima-over-radiation-2022-02-08/?fbclid=IwAR3N00Rqk7pLgZixjyqgwix7RFrnOFmkWZmiHyXT7MdATO-Vs42b0gqHShs

February 9, 2022 Posted by | Fuk 2022 | , , | Leave a comment

11 Years after the Nuclear Accident, Tomioka Town, Fukushima: A “Reconstruction Base” in a Place Where No One Can Live

February 7, 2022
On January 26, restrictions on entry were lifted in a part of the difficult-to-return area designated in Tomioka Town, Fukushima Prefecture, following the accident at TEPCO’s Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant. The town and the government aim to lift the evacuation order for the reconstruction center in the spring of 2023.

The town and the government are aiming to lift the evacuation order in the spring of 2023. This spring, for the first time in 11 years since the nuclear accident, people will be able to walk under cherry blossoms in full bloom in Tomioka Town, Fukushima Prefecture, on January 26, 2022.

On January 26, I walked around the area with a dosimeter in hand to assess the situation of radioactive contamination. The air radiation levels shown in the photo were measured at a height of one meter from the ground. The government’s long-term target for decontamination is 0.23 microsieverts per hour. The average natural radiation level in Japan is estimated to be 0.05 microsieverts per hour.

Houses being dismantled by heavy machinery. The same kind of work was going on here and there in the reconstruction center (The figure is the hourly radiation level near the location where the photo was taken. The unit is microsieverts.)

(3) Along the rows of cherry blossom trees, there were many empty lots after the demolition of houses. (The figure is the radiation level per hour near the location where the photo was taken; the unit is microsievert.)

(4) The remains of a TEPCO employee dormitory. 4) The site of a TEPCO employee dormitory, where bags containing garbage from decontamination were lined up (The figure shows the hourly radiation level near the location where the photo was taken. Unit: microsievert)

 The area that is now off-limits is about 390 hectares, mainly in the Yonomori district east of Yonomori Station on the Joban Line. The area used to be a residential area with a famous cherry blossom viewing spot, but now it has become nothing but vacant lots and is in a state of disrepair. Close to the station and surrounding a large park, there were many apartments as well as single-family houses, and there was also a dormitory for TEPCO employees.

There was also a dormitory for TEPCO employees. 5) A light passenger car with a flat tire was abandoned at the site of a former supermarket. (The figures are the hourly radiation levels near the location of the photo shoot, in microsieverts.)

(6) At the Night Forest Tsutsumi Park, the pond had dried up and weeds were growing thickly. Unit: microsievert)

(7) Bicycles and trash from decontamination were placed in front of a house with broken windows (The figure shows the hourly radiation level near the shooting location. Unit: microsievert)

(⑧) At a car dealership along Route 6, the glass was broken and the ceiling had fallen in (The figure shows the hourly radiation level near the location where the photo was taken. Unit: microsievert)

 The number of registered residents as of January 1 was 2,729. The town will start a “preparatory lodging” program during the major holidays this spring, allowing residents to sleep in their homes in the reconstruction center. (Kenta Onozawa)

(9) At the temporary storage site for decontaminated garbage, the dismantling of the sandbags that covered the perimeter of the garbage to shield it from radiation was in progress. Unit: microsievert)

10) The boundary between the reconstruction center and the difficult-to-return area. The area at the back of the photo has not yet been decontaminated and there is no prospect of lifting the evacuation order (The figure shows the hourly radiation level near the location where the photo was taken. Unit: microsievert)

The area was designated by the government after the accident at TEPCO’s Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant as a “difficult-to-return area” with high radiation levels, and is being developed so that residents can live there after priority decontamination.
https://www.tokyo-np.co.jp/article/158755?fbclid=IwAR24oLt_xTtnf9fAkfsVdDbNU132uvlGYswOXuiSTyXa4I01HNl38W4Qq5I

February 9, 2022 Posted by | Fuk 2022 | , , | 2 Comments

Taiwan Lifts Ban on Fukushima Food in Push to Join Trade Bloc

Economic priorities put before people’s health priority by politicians!

February 8, 2022

(Bloomberg) — Taiwan lifted its ban on most food imports from areas around the Fukushima nuclear power plant which melted down in 2011, removing an irritant in the bilateral relationship and making it easier for Japan’s government to support Taiwan joining an Asia-Pacific trade deal.

The decade-old ban on most foods imported from Fukushima and four surrounding prefectures will be lifted from Feb. 18, Taiwan’s government said at a briefing Tuesday. Restrictions will remain on certain food items that carry a greater risk of nuclear radiation, such as mushrooms and the meat of wild animals, Cabinet spokesman Lo Ping-cheng said at a briefing in Taipei.

“The lifting of the Fukushima ban sends a clear message to the world that Taiwan is willing to follow international standards in order to participate in economic and trade cooperation,” Taiwan’s chief trade negotiator John Deng said at the briefing. “This will provide a great push for Taiwan’s efforts to join CPTPP as Singapore and other member countries have expressed their willingness to welcome governments that can accept high standards.”

The government vowed to implement scientific inspections which are more stringent than international standards in an effort to reassure the public the imports will be safe.

Japan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in an emailed statement that the government welcomed the move as a first step, but would continue to press for removal of the remaining restrictions.

Domestic Opposition

Taiwan halted imports of food products from Fukushima and surrounding prefectures in 2011 over concerns of radiation contamination after the nuclear disaster triggered by the devastating earthquake and tsunami that year.

The food ban has become a domestic political issue in Taiwan. A majority of voters in a 2018 referendum agreed that it should be kept in place, a position supported by the opposition Kuomintang, which says the government is unable to provide unequivocal science-based guarantees about the safety of food imported from the area.

China, South Korea and Taiwan were the only governments that still ban some or all food imports from Fukushima and surrounding areas, according to Japan’s government.

The decision to lift the ban now could cost President Tsai valuable political capital before key regional elections scheduled for November. The move mirrors a previous decision by Tsai to remove restrictions on imports of pork containing trace amounts of the feed additive ractopamine.

That ban effectively blocked imports of pork from the U.S., which called it the biggest impediment to a bilateral free trade agreement. However after it was lifted, imports of pork from the U.S. fell 86% in 2021 compared to the previous year, according to data from Taiwan’s Council of Agriculture, as consumers shied away from it.

Push for International Integration

The lifting of the ban is seen as a key step in gaining Japan’s support for Taiwan to join the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, a move which could help the island reduce its economic reliance on China. Complicating Taiwan’s bid to join is the fact that China has also applied for entry, leaving member nations with a tough decision between admitting one, both or neither.

Cabinet spokesman Lo was quick to play down hopes of immediate progress in Taiwan’s CPTPP bid however, warning that ending the ban does not necessarily guarantee Taiwan will be accepted into the bloc but rather it is a prerequisite condition for membership. He also said Taipei’s move was not intended to earn Japan’s backing for Taiwan’s entry bid.

Both Taiwan and China are members of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum and the World Trade Organization, but Beijing has said that this isn’t a precedent that means that Taipei can also join the CPTPP. The government of the People’s Republic of China views Taiwan is part of its territory, a claim the authorities in Taipei reject. The government of President Tsai Ing-wen is looking to cultivate additional overseas markets to reduce the mainland’s economic leverage.

Those tensions mean a long and politicized application process is likely, with the members divided between nations like Japan, Australia and Canada pushing for Taiwan’s accession, and Southeast Asian countries keen to remain in China’s good graces, making them vulnerable to pressure from Beijing to thwart Taipei’s bid. In an interview with Bloomberg Television in November, Singapore’s Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan said there are “political complications” surrounding Taiwan’s bid.

https://www.yahoo.com/now/taiwan-set-lift-ban-fukushima-140007509.html

February 9, 2022 Posted by | Fuk 2022 | , , | Leave a comment

Five successive prime ministers saying that “many children suffer from thyroid cancer”

February 4, 2022

Environment Minister Tsuyoshi Yamaguchi has complained about five successive prime ministers saying that “many children suffer from thyroid cancer.” However, pediatric thyroid cancer is a rare disease that only occurs in one million people, but after the Fukushima nuclear power plant accident, 266 people (10 years) have been diagnosed out of 38,000 people. Why don’t you say a lot of this?” (Attorney Takayuki Fujioka)

We received a letter of protest from Mr. Yamaguchi, Minister of the Environment, regarding the joint statement by five former prime ministers compiled and released by JAERI. In response to this, JAERI has released a rebuttal and questions. In this video, Hiroyuki Kawai, the secretary general of JAERI, talks about the issues involved. Click here for the full text of the rebuttal and questions

https://twitter.com/genjiren2017/status/1489409614248497154

February 7, 2022 Posted by | Fuk 2022 | , , , | Leave a comment

Release] Protest against the condemnation of the letter of the five former prime ministers

Protest Statement

Feb. 4, 2022

311 Children’s Thyroid Cancer Trial Lawyers: Kenichi Ido, Chief of the Defense Team, Hiroyuki Kawai, Vice-Chairman, Yuichi Kaiwata

Five former prime ministers who are truly concerned about the future of Japan (Junichiro Koizumi, Morihiro Hosokawa, Naoto Kan, Yukio Hatoyama, and Tomiichi Murayama) sent a letter to the President of the European Commission on January 27, 2022. In a letter dated January 27, 2022, five former prime ministers (Ichiro Koizumi, Morihiro Hosokawa, Naoto Kan, Yukio Hatoyama, and Tomiichi Murayama) wrote to the President of the European Commission entitled “Nuclear and Carbon Free: Excluding Nuclear Power from the EU Taxonomy is Possible. -In the letter, he talks about the current situation in Fukushima. In response to the passage in the letter that “many children are suffering from thyroid cancer”, Goshi Hosono, a member of the Diet, tweeted about the current situation in Fukushima, So Yamaguchi, Minister of the Environment, wrote a letter to five former prime ministers, Takaichi Takai, Chairman of the General Affairs Committee of the Liberal Democratic Party, expressed his protest, Uchibori, Governor of Fukushima Prefecture, made an appeal, and Kishida, Prime Minister of Japan, responded to the Budget Committee. The LDP Fukushima prefectural federation has sent a letter of protest, and the government and the LDP have attacked and condemned each other. The reasons for this are that the above passage is “erroneous information” (Minister of Environment, Prime Minister Kishida), “erroneous content” (Chairman of the General Affairs Council Koichi), “contrary to scientific facts” (Hosono Rep.), “encourages unwarranted discrimination and prejudice” (Minister of Environment, Prime Minister Kishida), “brings anxiety to the youth of Fukushima” (Hosono Rep.), and “causes (Hosono), and “spreading rumors based on false information” (Takaichi, Chairman of the Board of Governors).

However, it is an undeniable fact that pediatric thyroid cancer, which was said to occur in only one or two children per million people per year before the Fukushima nuclear accident, has increased in Fukushima Prefecture in the 11 years since the accident, with 266 cases in the Fukushima Prefectural Health Survey and 27 cases in other surveys, for a total of at least 293 cases.

The above accusation by the Liberal Democratic Party may be an attempt to say that radiation exposure is not the cause of the high incidence of childhood thyroid cancer, but this is not a scientifically settled issue and their statement is “inaccurate information. The Fukushima Prefectural Citizens’ Health Study Review Committee and UNSCEAR (United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation) UNSCEAR (United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation) deny the existence of a cause-and-effect relationship, it does not mean that these organizations have the authority to determine the existence of a cause-and-effect relationship. On the other hand, there are many experts who argue that a causal relationship should be recognized.

In this regard, the Ministry of the Environment seems to be based on the so-called over-diagnosis theory that the screening of the Fukushima Prefectural Health Survey only finds a large number of latent cancers that do not progress even if left untreated, but the over-diagnosis theory is not a proven theory. However, the over-diagnosis theory is not a proven theory. On the contrary, the scheme of the Fukushima Prefectural Health Survey was carefully designed to avoid over-diagnosis and over-treatment while fully recognizing the existence of latent cancers among thyroid cancers. When a cancer is found, it is not removed in a hasty manner. Rather, the progress of the cancer is assessed and its invasion into the surrounding tissues and metastasis to the surrounding lymph nodes are carefully investigated, and surgery is performed only in cases that meet the indications for surgery stipulated in the thyroid treatment guidelines. The thyroid surgeon who performed the removal of pediatric thyroid cancer in Fukushima Prefecture has clearly denied that he overdiagnosed the disease.

Pediatric thyroid cancer is said to progress more rapidly than thyroid cancer in adults. Although Fukushima Prefecture has not disclosed the total number of cases, it appears that a significant number of children have had recurrences after surgery. Of the six pediatric thyroid cancer patients who filed a claim for damages against TEPCO on January 27, four of them had their cancers recur after surgery. Is the Ministry of the Environment saying that these cases are also overdiagnosed?

All of the children in Fukushima Prefecture were exposed to a certain amount of radiation. It is natural for children who suffer from extremely rare diseases caused by exposure to radiation to suspect that exposure is the cause. According to a survey conducted by the NPO 3.11 Thyroid Cancer Children’s Fund, the number of children and adolescents suffering from thyroid cancer has been increasing. According to a survey conducted by the NPO 3.11 Children’s Fund for Thyroid Cancer, about 60% of children and their families affected by thyroid cancer believe that the cause of the disease is exposure to radiation. However, lawsuits claiming compensation for damages by pediatric thyroid cancer patients have only just been filed. One of the plaintiffs stated at the press conference for the lawsuit that he could not even tell that he had thyroid cancer. I strongly fear that this series of bashing will make it harder than ever for pediatric thyroid cancer patients and their families to speak out about their feelings and questions. They should be aware that their comments are the ones that “promote discrimination and prejudice” and cause secondary damage to the young people and their families in Fukushima.

What the government and the administration should do is to conduct a thorough investigation into whether or not the high incidence of thyroid cancer in children is caused by exposure to radiation, make the data public, have open discussions with the public, and if a cause-and-effect relationship cannot be denied, have TEPCO promptly compensate the victims. We also need to establish a permanent support system to relieve the suffering of the young people in Fukushima. Rather than suppressing the anxiety of pediatric thyroid cancer patients and their families and silencing them, the role of the government should be to eliminate any discrimination and prejudice that may be caused by the revelation of the facts.

The cause of the high incidence of pediatric thyroid cancer in Fukushima Prefecture must continue to be investigated in order to reach a scientific conclusion. The lawsuit filed by patients against TEPCO has just started. The Lawyers Committee strongly protests against this series of unjustified bashing of the five former prime ministers by the government and the Liberal Democratic Party.

That is all.

Source: Support Network 311: Children with Thyroid Cancer

https://www.311support.net/post/%E6%8A%97-%E8%AD%B0-%E5%A3%B0-%E6%98%8E?fbclid=IwAR3vKaXto3gRyNByZmHyWRB59aNX7FMf7yIoXzkAryINdwAEPwrFDh2xSWA

February 4, 2022 Posted by | Fuk 2022 | , , , , | Leave a comment

Environment Minister Yamaguchi flirts with five former prime ministers: “Thyroid cancer has nothing to do with the nuclear accident.

National Diet of Japan, House of Representatives, Budget Committee, General Questions, Environment Minister Tsuyoshi Yamaguchi

February 2, 2022

Environment Minister Sou Yamaguchi announced on Wednesday that he had sent letters of protest to five former prime ministers, including Junichiro Koizumi and Morihiro Hosokawa, for spreading false information about the health effects of radiation on children in Fukushima Prefecture.

 Koizumi and Hosokawa, as well as Naoto Kan, Yukio Hatoyama and Tomiichi Murayama, are opposed to the European Commission’s decision to include nuclear power plants as a “green” investment that contributes to decarbonization, as many children are suffering from thyroid cancer due to the accident at Tokyo Electric Power Co. He had sent a statement to the chairman of the committee dated last month 27. In his letter, Mr. Yamaguchi complained that the wording of the statement by the former prime minister and others “may lead to discrimination and prejudice and is not appropriate.
https://www.nikkan-gendai.com/articles/view/life/300797?fbclid=IwAR22vMJNVWo6niqyS-xO8yf7TpCS8TNhoTnMwt8UjtoE1jSeaKy_0AH5ZJY

February 4, 2022 Posted by | Fuk 2022 | , , , | Leave a comment

[Urgent Release] Examining the Significantly Reduced “Oral” Thyroid Radiation Exposure in the UNSCEAR 2020 Report

February 3, 2022

In a letter sent by five former prime ministers, including Junichiro Koizumi and Naoto Kan, to the European Commission, they stated that “many children are suffering from thyroid cancer” due to the accident at TEPCO’s Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant. Prime Minister Fumio Kishida responded at the Budget Committee of the House of Representatives on February 2 that the letter was inappropriate because it could spread false information that children in Fukushima Prefecture are suffering from health problems caused by radiation and promote unwarranted discrimination and prejudice. He responded. The governor of Fukushima Prefecture, Masao Uchibori, also wrote a letter to the former prime minister and others urging them to disseminate objective information based on “scientific findings,” saying that according to the opinions of experts, no causal relationship with radiation exposure has been recognized.

The basis for the current denial of thyroid cancer by the national and prefectural governments is that the thyroid exposure associated with the Fukushima nuclear accident is much lower than that of Chernobyl. However, the exact thyroid absorbed dose from the Fukushima nuclear accident has not been measured. All the figures currently being produced are merely estimates based on simulations and other data.

The same is true for the 2020 report of the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR), which the government places particular emphasis on. In particular, the 2020 report released in March last year is based on the same estimates as the agency’s 201 In particular, the 2020 report, which was released in March last year, is characterized by a significant decrease in the estimated radiation doses to the public compared to the report released in 2013. In the 2013 Report, the thyroid exposure from oral intake (infants (1 year old)) was uniformly 32.79 mGy in Fukushima Prefecture, but in the 2013 Report, it was significantly reduced from 1 to several mGy.

OurPlanetTV obtained 15,000 pieces of radioactive measurement data and meeting minutes from the Nuclear Regulation Authority and Fukushima Prefecture in the early stages of the accident. We added our own coverage and published the article in September last year.
Free release of Iwanami “Science” articles. https://www.ourplanet-tv.org/40513/

In response to the fact that the national government and the prefectural government have expressed the view that they deny the existence of thyroid cancer patients despite the fact that there are as many as 300 thyroid cancer patients, Iwanami Shoten will release the September 2021 issue of Science, which reports on the contamination of food immediately after the accident, in digital format free of charge.
https://www.ourplanet-tv.org/44455/?fbclid=IwAR0Z-2CfTEctWkfNg-GzphLXiTd7FCdnrnYwSodolzJz6DARqJkOdicPUb4

February 4, 2022 Posted by | Fuk 2022 | , , , | Leave a comment

Fukushima governor refutes ex-PMs’ anti-nuclear letter to EU

February 3, 2022

The governor of Fukushima has sent a written protest to five former Japanese prime ministers for saying that many children in the prefecture are suffering from thyroid cancer as a result of the 2011 nuclear accident.

Governor Uchibori Masao has taken issue with a letter the ex-leaders sent to the European Union last month calling on the bloc to pursue a nuclear-free society.

He wrote to the leaders on Wednesday, saying they should present objective information based on scientific evidence.

The letter dated January 27 and signed by Koizumi Junichiro, Hosokawa Morihiro, Kan Naoto, Hatoyama Yukio and Murayama Tomiichi, was a reaction to the EU’s plan to label some nuclear power plants as green investments.

Koizumi is an advisor to a private organization that promotes zero nuclear power and renewable energy.

The letter refers to the accident at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant that was triggered by the 2011 quake and tsunami. The leaders say, “What we have witnessed in Fukushima over the last decade is an indescribable tragedy and contamination on an unprecedented scale.” They add, “many children are suffering from thyroid cancer.”

In Fukushima Prefecture, a survey has found 266 cases of confirmed or suspected thyroid cancer in people aged 18 years or younger at the time of the nuclear accident.

But a panel of experts commissioned by the prefecture says that no links have been established so far between the thyroid cancer cases and radiation exposure.

In his complaint to the ex-leaders, Governor Uchibori says providing accurate information based on scientific knowledge is crucial for the rebuilding of Fukushima.

He urged that when they refer to the current state of the prefecture, they should use objective information that is based on the prefecture’s views and reports by international scientific organizations.

Speaking at a Diet committee on Wednesday, Japanese Prime Minister Kishida Fumio called the letter by his predecessors inappropriate. Kishida said the letter spreads incorrect information that children in Fukushima are suffering health damage from radiation. He said it also raises concerns of promoting unreasonable discrimination and prejudice.

Last month, six people who were 6 to 16 years old and living in Fukushima at the time of the nuclear accident filed a lawsuit demanding that the plant operator pay damages for their thyroid cancer.

Their lawyers say this is the first time a group of residents has filed a lawsuit against Tokyo Electric Power Company over health problems they claim were caused by radiation from the nuclear accident.

The lawyers say the plaintiffs have had all or parts of their thyroid glands removed and some need lifetime hormonal treatment.

February 4, 2022 Posted by | Fuk 2022 | , , , , | Leave a comment

Open letter from five former Prime Ministers of Japan to the EU on nuclear power

February 2, 2022

Five former prime ministers of Japan wrote an open letter on 27 January to European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen asking her to review the proposal to consider nuclear energy as a possible alternative to fossil fuels.

The reasons for this demand lie in the consideration that nuclear energy is dangerous and uncontrollable, as the Three Mile Island disaster in the United States, Chernobyl in the former Soviet Union and the TEPCO plant in Fukushima have dramatically demonstrated.

This taxonomy also promotes the misconception that nuclear energy is a possible alternative to climate-altering sources when in fact the unresolved problem of nuclear waste and the danger inherent in nuclear power plants poses a risk to the environment and the very survival of mankind.

In the same letter, the German government’s decision to abandon nuclear energy, motivated in part by the Fukushima disaster itself, is considered courageous, and the European Union is urged to show the same courage by favouring only renewable sources among its energy conversion choices.

The letter in full

Open letter from five former Prime Ministers of Japan to the EU on nuclear power

February 4, 2022 Posted by | Fuk 2022 | , , , | 1 Comment

I couldn’t tell anyone for 10 years

February 2, 2022
Six men and women between the ages of 17 and 27 who lived in Fukushima Prefecture at the time of the accident filed a lawsuit against TEPCO on January 27, claiming they suffered from thyroid cancer due to radiation exposure from the accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.
They filed a lawsuit in the Tokyo District Court claiming a total of 616 million yen in damages. The main issue in the trial is expected to be whether or not there is a causal relationship between radiation exposure and thyroid cancer.

Lawyers and plaintiffs hold a press conference.
At the House of Representatives in Nagata-cho, Tokyo.

The six people in question, aged between 6 and 16 at the time of the accident, are high school students, temporary workers and employees living in the counties of Fukushima, Tokyo and Kanagawa. Two of them had a lobe of the thyroid removed, and the other four had to have the whole thyroid removed because of recurrence (in the case of one of them, metastasis had spread to the lungs). All of them had to stop their studies or their professional activity in order to undergo these surgical procedures and medical treatments. They live in fear and anxiety of a recurrence, and their daily lives have been curtailed due to fatigue and weakness caused by the disease.

The complaint points out that many of the thyroid cancers found in children in Fukushima County – including the six plaintiffs – are not hereditary and that the only possible trigger is radiation exposure. If there are other causes, it is up to TEPCO to prove it, she says.

Normally, the number of reported cases of thyroid cancer in children diagnosed is about 1 to 2 per 1 million. After the nuclear accident, a prefectural health survey in Fukushima Prefecture found about 300 people either suspected of having thyroid cancer or already diagnosed. But the expert commission appointed by the department said it “does not recognize for the moment” a causal relationship with radiation exposure.

For its part, the operator TEPCO announced that it would respond in good faith after learning more about the claims and allegations of the plaintiffs.


I want to change the situation by raising my voice

“We have spent the last ten years without telling anyone because we were afraid of being discriminated against if we revealed that we had thyroid cancer,” said one of the plaintiffs, 26, at a press conference in Tokyo on the afternoon of January 27. “But about 300 children have thyroid cancer,” she said, fighting back tears that choked her. “I want to improve the situation, if only a little, by raising my voice.

The woman from Nakadôri, in central Fukushima Prefecture, was a second-year university student when she was diagnosed with thyroid cancer in 2015 at the age of 19. The following year, after one of her thyroid lobes was removed, her physical strength decreased dramatically. As her health continued to deteriorate, she left the advertising agency where she was working in Tokyo after graduating from university after a year and a half. She is currently an office worker in Tokyo. She says, “I had to give up my dream job, and I am still struggling to do my job properly. I don’t have any dreams or hopes for the future.
Immediately after she was diagnosed with cancer, she felt very uncomfortable when the doctor told her that the disease had nothing to do with the nuclear accident.


That day, we were moving things…

The plaintiff at a press conference after her decision to sue TEPCO.
lawsuit against TEPCO.

The young woman’s mother, who was with her daughter when she was diagnosed, suddenly remembered what they were doing on March 14, 2011, the day of the hydrogen explosion in the No. 3 unit of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. They were outside their grandparents’ house, which was half destroyed by the earthquake, helping them move their belongings. At the end of the day, as soon as the mother heard about the explosion at the plant, she brought her daughter inside. “That day, I shouldn’t have asked you for a hand with the move,” the mother whispered as she drove home from the hospital. It was the only time she showed any remorse for forcing this moving chore on her daughter.

Before she was told she had cancer, the young woman had to travel back and forth between Fukushima and Tokyo for tests. However, the Fukushima county fully covers the medical expenses covered by the health insurance, but not the transportation expenses. So she took long-distance buses, which are cheaper than the high-speed train, but these trips became more and more physically demanding.
Surgery and medical examinations in Tokyo, a heavy financial burden

After the diagnosis, because of her distrust of the hospitals in Fukushima, she preferred to have surgery and medical examinations in Tokyo. Each time, her parents accompanied her. She had to pay the entire cost of the endoscopic surgery to minimize the scars on her neck out of her own pocket, as it was not covered by the prefectural aid at that time.

With all the demands of her treatment, she failed to apply for a renewal of her university scholarship, and by her third year of study, she had to pay her full tuition.

“When I heard my parents talking about taking a large amount of money out of their life insurance to fund my expenses, I felt depressed that I had caused them so much trouble,” she said.
Fear of recurrence: ‘I’m anxious about what comes next’.

After the surgery, she often caught colds, developed pneumonia, bronchitis and asthma. However, she can only receive assistance if the care is recognized as part of the treatment for thyroid cancer. The department has set up an annual budget, funded by a state grant, to cover medical expenses “for as long as possible,” according to the Department of Health Survey, but it’s unclear how long that will last. The young woman, who is still afraid of a recurrence, and feels very anxious about what will happen to her in the future, is therefore asking for more aid.

The article in Japanese in Tokyo Shimbun published on January 27, 2022

https://www.tokyo-np.co.jp/article/156781

February 3, 2022 Posted by | Fuk 2022 | , , , , | Leave a comment

Homesick,

(Sub in Eng, French & Spanish)
Two years after the Fukushima nuclear disaster, Murai braves danger and wanders through the no-go zone in order to spend time with Jun, his eight-year-old son.

Behind the scene : vimeo.com/670872326

Written and directed by Koya KAMURA (insta : @koyakamura)
Production : OFFSHORE
Produced by Rafael ANDREA SOATTO
Co-production : TOBOGGAN
Co-produced by Hiroto OGI, Kaz SHINAGAWA

* César 2021 – Official selection *
58 official selections / 40 Awards

February 3, 2022 Posted by | Fuk 2022 | , , , | Leave a comment