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DESCRIPTION:2/11/13 Rally Speak Out To Stop The Repression Of Anti-Nuclear Actists, 
 Oppose Restart Of Japan NUKE Plants & LDP Abe\n\nGovernment Plan To Build 
 New NUKE Plants\n\nMonday February 11, 2013 3:00 PM Japanese Consulate 50 
 Fremont St./Mission San Francisco\n\nThe No Nukes Action Committee NNAC 
 will be having a rally and speak out on Monday February 11, 2013 at the 
 Japanese Consulate on 50 Fremont St. San Francisco at 3:00 PM to protest 
 the action of the Japan LDP Abe government to push for the building of more 
 nuclear plants, the continued campaign that the Fukushima area can be 
 "decontaminated" and the propaganda that  Japan can "overcome" nuclear 
 radiation. The reality is far different despite the government industry 
 media campaign.\nThe government is also repressing anti-nuclear activists 
 with arrest and on 2/3/03 over 1,000 people rallied in Osaka against the 
 arrests and repression of 
 activists.\n\nhttp://www.wtop.com/46/3176017/Md-woman-sees-long-term-effects-of-radiation-in-Fukushima\n\nThe 
 2/11/2013  rally and protest will also call for the immediate halt of the 
 burning of nuclear rubble at prefectures around the country, the halt of 
 exports of nuclear technology and demand that Fukushima residents be 
 adequately compensated for their evacuation from Fukushima.\nThe government 
 has also stepped up  police harassment including the arrest  of 
 anti-nuclear activists such as Osaka Professor Masaki Shimoji. He along 
 with other anti-nuclear activists were arrested because of their political 
 activity to inform the people of Japan about the danger of the burning of 
 nuclear rubble in Osaka after they walked through the Osaka train station. 
 While he and some others have been released there are still anti-nuclear 
 activists in jail for seeking to educate the public about the dangers of 
 the burning of nuclear rubble and the continued radiation threats from 
 Fukushima and the nuclear power industry.\n\nThis attack on democratic 
 rights by the Japanese government as it pursues its effort to continue to 
 hoodwink that the Japanese people that radiation is not harmful is 
 connected. The Abe government's call for the construction of more nuclear 
 plants  must be challenged throughout the world and people throughout the 
 world must also come to the defense of Japanese anti-nuclear activists who 
 are coming under increasing attack for speaking out and organizing against 
 nuclear power and the nuclear industry.\n\nWe call on all opponents of 
 nuclear power/weapons and those fighting for democratic rights to 
 participate and speak out against the new actions of the LDP Abe government 
 which only received 30% of the vote in the recent election. The Japanese 
 people are being coerced by  the pro-nuclear politicians and the US 
 government and nuclear industry to move forward with this deadly and 
 dangerous industry despite the dangers to the survival of Japan and the 
 world.\n\n\nThe No Nukes Action Committee NNAC has a regular speak out and 
 rally every month on the 11th to connect with the March 11, 2011 Fukushima 
 nuclear meltdown and continued radioactive contamination of Japan and the 
 world by this plant.\n\nPlease contact our committee for more information 
 and if your organization is interested in endorsing this action please let 
 us know.\n\nNo Nukes Action 
 Committee\nhttp://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/\nnonukesactioncommittee(at)gmail.com\n\nI 
 want my mate released! Osaka Profesor Shimoji\nTUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 
 2012\nI want my mate 
 released!\nhttp://peak-guy.blogspot.com/2012/12/i-want-my-mate-released.html\n\nMy 
 mate is illegally detained by the Osaka police. I want him and others 
 released at once.\nPlease sign the petition.\n\n\n--------\nOn Sunday 
 morning of 9 December 2012, the Osaka prefectural police arrested and 
 charged Masaki Shimoji, Associate Professor of Economy at Hannan 
 University, for three alleged offences, violation of the ‘railway 
 services act’; forcible obstruction of business; and unlawfull 
 trespass.\n\nWe believe arrest of Shimoji is unlawful and he should be 
 released immediately. We fear that this is a crude attempt to intimidate 
 those citizens opposed to the nationwide spread of radioactive 
 materials.\n\nShimoji was targeted because he was involved in the campaign 
 to oppose city plans to incinerate imported earthquake debris throughout 
 the nation, including Osaka, where he resides, and believes the plans will 
 contaminate areas unaffected by last year’s nuclear accident in 
 Fukishima.\n\nThe plans are proposed to commence in February 2013. After 
 receiving and incinerating the earthquake debris from the north of Japan, 
 local governments will then landfill the ashes. The central Japanese 
 government\nhas pushed the program to ‘share the burden by all’ and has 
 asked local governments throughout the nation to accept debris from 
 earthquake zones.\n\nThe alleged offences took place on 17 October 2012, 
 nearly two months before the Shimoji’s arrest. On that day at around 3pm, 
 people including Shimoji, gathered on the footpath on the north-eastern 
 corner of the Osaka railway station. In twos and threes, they then headed 
 towards the city office to lodge their opposition to the city’s plan. 
 They walked through the eastern corridor inside the station, from north to 
 south, which is the apparent cause of the offences.\n\nBesides the flimsy 
 nature of the charges, the fact that Shimoji was arrested almost two months 
 after the alleged offence of ‘walking through the station premises’ 
 took place is very unusual. We can only conclude that this is\nnothing but 
 a crude attempt to silence us, suppress civil liberties and curb our 
 democratic rights.\n\nSince the earthquake and subsequent nuclear plant 
 disasters on 11 March 2011, Shimoji and others have tirelessly cared for 
 those 'refugees', most of them mothers with small children, who fled from 
 the eastern parts of Japan, including Fukushima and other devastated areas, 
 to the western parts of the country.\n\nThey have also campaigned 
 vigorously to oppose the nationwide spread of radioactive contamination. 
 The nuclear disaster at the Fukushima Daiichi plant has damaged the health 
 and welfare of numerous people, both physically and psychological. It has 
 destroyed the livelihoods of many. The national government who promoted the 
 nuclear power recklessly for decades must take now responsibility. The 
 manufacturers of the reactors and power utilities who have failed to 
 implement adequate safety measures should be blamed for their 
 negligence.\n\nYet, while their crimes for causing such devastation are 
 still left unaccounted for, people who are trying to minimise the damage 
 are being handed criminal charges. This should not be allowed. In Osaka 
 alone, five citizens have been arrested, detained and charged because they 
 expressed their opposition to the city plan to spread the radioactive 
 contamination.\n\nWe strongly denounce such arbitrary use of the law. We 
 demand the immediate and unconditional release of those unfairly detained 
 and an apology.\n\nThe Citizens Opposing the Nationwide\nSpread of 
 Radioactive Materials\nSecretariat  Uiko Hasegawa and Park 
 Seung-Joon\n\ncivicactivity(at)mail.goo.ne.jp\nStatement of Prof. Masaki 
 Shimoji\n\n(Masaki Shimoji, Asst. Professor of economics at Hannan 
 University, Osaka, was arrested on Sunday, Dec. 9, 2012 at his home and is 
 currently under detention. His arrest warrant states that he illegally led 
 a protest march through a portion of Osaka station on Oct. 17, 
 2012,\nrefused to obey the orders of station personnel, and jeopardized 
 station business. Petitions are being signed for his release.)\n\nWhat is 
 written in my arrest warrant is untrue. I am totally shocked that the 
 police, who witnessed my actions that are the basis for my arrest, have 
 created completely false statements. Why do the police create lies in order 
 to arrest me? The reason is I am participating in citizens groups 
 protesting the re-start of nuclear power plants and the further spread of 
 radiation (through disaster area debris incineration). In particular, I 
 have criticized the unlawful conduct by police that I have come across 
 through my participation in this movement. I have not done anything 
 wrong.\n\nJapan and the world we live in is an extremely dangerous place. 
 The nuclear disaster of Fukushima is not under control, and should the 
 spent fuel pool in reactor no. 4 collapse, the consequences would be 
 catastrophic for not only Japan but the world as well. Nothing has been 
 done to deal with nuclear fallout, as food and other products continue 
 through the distribution system. Not only that, a campaign claiming “we 
 don’t have enough electricity” is being waged, and use of nuclear 
 energy is still being promoted. This is sheer madness.\n\nIn the coming 6 
 to 12 months, the policies implemented by the government will determine our 
 future. Looking at the faces of my students on a daily basis who are about 
 20 years old, I think about what kind of world they will live in when in 20 
 years they reach the same age as me. Each time I do, I regret that those of 
 us of the older generation were unable to prevent the nuclear disaster. The 
 young are not responsible. If anything, I want to work toward leaving an 
 even somewhat better place for them. The disaster has already happened and 
 there is not much time left. But there is hope.\n\nNow, I cannot act but I 
 have not given up. I have been able to deliver this statement despite my 
 detention. And if enough people act and raise their voices, we might be in 
 time. I especially call on other university educators, doctors, scientists, 
 and all those who are considered to be ‘specialists’: Learn from those 
 citizens who appear to be “uneducated or emotional.” Their voices 
 remain unheard and ignored; speak out so their concerns can be heard.\nThe 
 truth will show itself through a process of critique and dialogue. Stand on 
 the side of those who oppose and act so that the truth will be known, by 
 taking to task the government and those wielding power. You may make 
 errors, and that is all right. Always stand on the side of those with less 
 power and support them. Even if they make mistakes, use your authority to 
 get to the truth when dealing with those in power. It doesn’t matter what 
 your field is; have the courage to speak out.\n\nFinally, I address the 
 issue that I have been most deeply involved; the debris from disaster 
 areas. The city of Osaka forcefully began experimental incineration of such 
 debris at the end of November and continues preparation for the full 
 implementation beginning in February of next year. As I have repeatedly 
 said, the wide-spread incineration throughout Japan of disaster debris will 
 not benefit anyone. Budget funding earmarked for the reconstruction of 
 disaster areas will be funneled off for such incineration, hampering 
 progress on reconstruction. Radiation will be scattered, those living in 
 affected areas will be forced to endure living in contaminated conditions, 
 and the responsibilities of TEPCO will be lightened. We will pay for this 
 with our lives and that of our children and those who are yet born. Such an 
 irresponsible policy should not be allowed. We must stop this. Those of you 
 who have studied and fought together, do not give up and continue to fight. 
 For those of you who were not know about the debris incineration issue, 
 learn more and lend us a hand. This is a fight to save our future.\n\nI do 
 not know when I will be released, but I will return at some point. Even if 
 I’m not visible, I am with you in spirit. As for the others who were also 
 unfairly arrested, I’m sure they feel the same way. I look forward to 
 seeing you again.\n\nDecember 12, 2012 Masaki Shimoji\nPosted by 
 山頂２号 on Tuesday, December 18, 2012\n\nSolidarity Letter On The Case 
 Of Japanese  Professor Masaki Shimoji And Growing Repression In Japan Of 
 Anti-Nuclear Activists\n\nAdrienne Carey Hurley, Prof \nImportant Statement 
 from a Colleague in Japan\nFebruary 1, 2013 8:43:58 AM PST\n\n\nDear 
 Colleagues,\n\nAs many of you know, Professor Masaki Shimoji, a professor 
 of economics at Hannan University, was arrested by Osaka prefectural police 
 on December 9, 2012, held for twenty days, and released without charge.  
 One can be arrested and held without charge for up to 23 days in Japan.  
 The Hannan University administration was informed that police intended to 
 arrest Professor Shimoji, and they provided police with access to Professor 
 Shimoji’s office and cooperated with their investigation into Professor 
 Shimoji’s participation in a small demonstration that took place in a 
 train station in Osaka several months earlier, on October 17th.  Professor 
 Shimoji and others were protesting the distribution and incineration of 
 radioactive rubble from Fukushima. \n\nThis article provides further 
 background information: 
 http://www.jfissures.org/2013/01/20/osaka-pushes-incendiary-tsunami-debris-plan/.\n\nProfessor 
 Koji Shima, who also teaches in the Faculty of Economics at Hannan 
 University, has been one of the very few members of the Hannan community to 
 show solidarity with Professor Shimoji.  Professor Shima, whose areas of 
 research specialization are the Social History of Health and Economics, 
 convened and organized the “Group in Support of Professor Shimoji.  
 Professor Shima presented the following statement to that group on January 
 7, 2013.  Please share this statement widely.  (The original Japanese is 
 attached to this message.)\n\n***\nTo the members of the “Group in 
 Support of Professor Shimoji”\n\n2013 has just begun.\n\nWe founded the 
 “Group in Support of Professor Shimoji” immediately after his unjust 
 arrest on December 9th, 2012 with the aims of having him released from 
 custody and to ensure that the university would not take any disciplinary 
 actions against him. After twenty days of worry and uncertainty, we were 
 pleased to hear that he would be released without charges, as he rightfully 
 should have been. However, serious issues that were brought to light by 
 this incident still remain, and in order to work towards their solution, I 
 believe that it will be necessary to face these struggles by creating an 
 organization with a different name and of a different nature. Since we have 
 achieved the original goals that we set out for the Group in Support of 
 Professor Shimoji, I would like to announce the dissolution of the 
 Group.\n\nLooking back in detail at what happened on October 17th, 2012, I 
 was shocked that in Japan, a country with a constitutional government, a 
 person could be arrested like this for an action that is constitutionally 
 protected. I can neither forget nor forgive the insult that Professor 
 Shimoji and his family suffered as a result of his unjust arrest and 
 lengthy detention. For the authorities who spent two months planning and 
 preparing for his arrest, the fact that he will not be prosecuted means 
 defeat. They were unable to find any reason for prosecution that would 
 stand up in court, and were further unable to “discover” any other 
 evidence from the materials that they confiscated that could be used as an 
 excuse to arrest him again or extend his period of detention. This clearly 
 demonstrates the true facts of this “criminal incident”.\n\nThe primary 
 factor in bringing about this victory was of course Professor Shimoji’s 
 own struggle. However, the spread of the movement in support of Professor 
 Shimoji, such as the declaration of protest by constitutional scholars, 
 also contributed a great deal to this victory. I also have no doubt that 
 our “Group in Support of Professor Shimoji”, in its own small way, 
 formed one part of this wider social movement. However, when I ask myself 
 whether Hannan University responded in an appropriate way to this 
 “incident”, in which a professor was treated like a heinous anti-social 
 criminal and taken away from his own home in handcuffs in a manner which, 
 as has been consistently pointed out by legal scholars, has not happened 
 since the period of disorder and chaos just following World War II, 
 unfortunately the answer is “no”. The students from Professor 
 Shimoji’s seminars and lectures did not organize any petitions or 
 statements, nor make any appeals to the university authorities. 
 Furthermore, one would think that certain questions would naturally arise 
 among university scholars, at the very least regarding the reasons behind 
 his arrest or the fact that he should have been immediately released. Yet 
 not a single declaration in support of Professor Shimoji was released from 
 any group of faculty including from his own department, nor the department 
 head, nor from the person in the highest position of responsibility for 
 education and learning at the university, the president.\n\nBut that’s 
 not all. On December 19th, it was brought to light that the university had 
 been informed by the police in advance that Professor Shimoji would be 
 arrested. University president Tatsumi and vice president Kanzawa told us 
 on December 19th that members of Section 3 of the Public Safety Division of 
 the Osaka Police had come to the university on December 6th and informed 
 them that they would be arresting Professor Shimoji and conducting a search 
 of his office. It is not easy to surmise the real motives as to why the 
 Public Safety Division would go against common sense and inform the 
 university in advance, as though testing out how the university would 
 respond. However, the administration showed no question or hesitation in 
 dealing with the police. On the contrary, the president, who interpreted 
 this visit as a kindly gesture intended to avoid causing any problems for 
 the university, carried on as though nothing had happened, except for 
 establishing a “crisis management office” that evening. And in spite of 
 the fact that various meetings were held for planning and management and 
 among department heads throughout the following week, in which the details 
 of what had happened the previous week were announced openly, not a single 
 question, objection, or protest was raised with regards to the 
 administration’s measures (or perhaps their lack of measures). With all 
 of this in mind, it is clear that nobody, from the president to the vice 
 president, to the department head and all other management, considered the 
 fact that they might be seriously compromising the university’s autonomy 
 in allowing the police’s unjust arrest of a professor and search of his 
 office.\n\nFurthermore, as a professor at the same university, I am ashamed 
 at their complete lack of sympathy or imagination as people living similar 
 lives to Professor Shimoji. Their colleague, with whom they spent their 
 days together teaching and conducting research, was taken by surprise and 
 arrested for an act that is protected by the constitution, had his freedom 
 taken away, and had police come tromping disrespectfully through his home 
 and office. He has been humiliated in a way that cannot be undone. If these 
 people had had even an ounce of imagination, they would feel some sympathy 
 for Professor Shimoji’s pain and distress, as well as for the sadness and 
 bewilderment of his family, having had someone they love suddenly taken 
 from them. Then, there could have been any number of other possible 
 scenarios for what happened after the morning of December 9th. When I think 
 of these other possibilities, I shiver at their cruelty.\n\nI suppose the 
 root rot plaguing this university has probably been deeply and quietly 
 spreading for years. I stepped away from administrative service a while 
 back simply to get back to the work I am supposed to do, namely educating 
 my students, but I deeply regret my negligence and irresponsibility in not 
 having fought against the prevailing current here.\n\nHowever, the gap 
 between myself and the administration has grown extremely wide, and I feel 
 that the gap cannot be bridged. The twenty days since December 9th have 
 provided a valuable experience in which I learned how difficult it is to go 
 against the grain and to fight.\n\nHere, as we bring the “Group in 
 Support of Professor Shimoji” to a close, I have shared some of my 
 feelings on the matter. I would like to express my deepest thanks and 
 appreciation to all of you for your support.\n\nJanuary 7, 2013\nKoji 
 Shima\n\n\nProfessor Shima will be quitting his job at Hannan University 
 when the academic year ends in March of 2013, two years before reaching the 
 age of retirement. The following message currently appears on his faculty 
 website.\n(http://www.hannan-u.ac.jp/doctor/business/shima/st9plj0000000xf3.html)\n\n“It 
 seems as though the accident at the Fukushima Daiichi Reactor brought on by 
 the earthquake of March 11, 2011 is gradually fading from the memory of 
 people in Kansai.  Is this the best we can do even as the danger of 
 radiation spreads across all of Japan with each moment that passes?  And 
 even when there are fourteen aging and decrepit reactors (a third of the 
 total number of reactors in Japan) in Fukushima Prefecture, which is only 
 about 150 kilometers away from Osaka?  I want to do whatever I can, however 
 humble my abilities, to break us out of the snare of the nuclear safety 
 myth and reclaim this country’s security.”\n\nFor those who know 
 Japanese, Professor Shima also appears in the following press conference 
 video beginning at 
 27:58:\n\nhttp://www.dailymotion.com/video/xw5ulm_20121222-1-2-yyyyyyyyyyyyyyy-yyyyyy-yyyyyyy-etv_news#.UQqa1-hRYZk\n\nPlease 
 share this message widely, such as via your mailing lists, Facebook, 
 etc.\n\nSincerely,\nAdrienne Carey Hurley \nAssociate Professor and 
 Graduate Program Director\nDepartment of East Asian Studies\nMcGill 
 University\n\nOsaka pushes incendiary tsunami debris plan\nMove to burn 
 36,000 tons from Iwate, bury it in bay spooks 
 locals\nhttp://aws.japantimes.co.jp/news/2013/01/12/news/osaka-pushes-incendiary-tsunami-debris-plan/#.UQwP5I6hDFI\nBY 
 ERIC JOHNSTON\nSTAFF WRITER\nJAN 12, 2013\n\nOSAKA – Despite fears of 
 radioactive contamination, Osaka Prefecture is finalizing plans to begin 
 incinerating 36,000 tons of tsunami debris from Iwate Prefecture next 
 month.\n\nThe debris is scheduled to be burned in the city of Osaka’s 
 harbor district. The resulting ash will then become landfill on Yumeshima, 
 or “Dream Island,” a man-made isle in Osaka Bay that was once a 
 proposed site for the city’s failed 2008 Summer Olympics 
 bid.\n\nOriginally, the prefecture was supposed to have begun burning the 
 debris last spring. But local opposition due to fears the incineration 
 would create highly radioactive ash delayed the start. Critics argued that 
 even with special filters at the incineration plant, radioactive ash would 
 still pollute the air, and that it was folly to bury the ash in the bay 
 area.\n\nThe prefecture’s maximum radiation limit for incinerated ash is 
 2,000 becquerels per kilogram, far stricter than the central government 
 threshold of 8,000 becquerels. Critics, however, warned the true health 
 hazard was being underplayed by local officials, and that it was important 
 not to focus on the 2,000-becquerel standard but on the dangers presented 
 by burning 36,000 tons with that degree of contamination.\n\nHowever, after 
 the Osaka Ishin no Kai (One Osaka)-controlled prefectural assembly gave its 
 OK, with the backing of both Osaka Gov. Ichiro Matsui and Osaka Mayor Toru 
 Hashimoto, who founded the local group, a test incineration of 100 tons was 
 carried out at the end of November.\n\nThe resulting ash had radiation 
 levels of 38 becquerels per kilogram, prefectural officials said.\n\nBut 
 citizens’ groups in Osaka and elsewhere continued their opposition, 
 leading to several arrests.\n\nThe most notorious was that of Hannan 
 University professor Masaki Shimoji, one of the most visible leaders in the 
 fight against burning the debris. He was arrested in early December for 
 allegedly trespassing, obstructing business activities and violating an 
 obscure railway services law.\n\nWhat was newsworthy about Shimoji’s 
 arrest is that it took place nearly two months after his alleged crimes. On 
 Oct. 17, he and several others gathered at JR Osaka Station and began 
 heading to City Hall via the eastern corridor of the station to protest the 
 incineration of Iwate debris.\n\nThe arrest warrant stated that Shimoji led 
 an illegal protest march through the station, and that he refused to obey 
 the orders of station personnel. Shimoji denied the allegations, and 
 quickly attracted the support of legal scholars and activists 
 nationwide.\n\n“Shimoji was targeted because he was involved in the 
 campaign to oppose city plans to incinerate imported earthquake debris 
 throughout the nation, including Osaka, where he resides,” said activists 
 Uiko Hasegawa and Park Seung Joon in an international appeal for his 
 release.\n\nShimoji was freed at the end of December without 
 charges.\n\nNow, with less than a month to go before incineration is slated 
 to start, opponents are mounting what may be a last-ditch campaign to halt 
 the project.\n\nOn Thursday, Kinuko Motoshige sent a petition on behalf of 
 27 citizens’ groups nationwide to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, Environment 
 Minister Nobuteru Ishihara and two other officials in the Cabinet, asking 
 them to put pressure on the city of Osaka to block the debris-burning 
 plan.\n\nIn addition to citing various environmental reasons, the petition 
 called on the Liberal Democratic Party government to sit down with city 
 officials and discuss the issue in a public debate over the safety of 
 incinerating the debris, and to not burn any of it until the dangers are 
 completely eliminated.\n\n“Some 2,232 letters and petitions calling on 
 the city not to burn the debris have been sent to municipal assembly 
 members. While LDP members have opposed the burning, Osaka Ishin no Kai and 
 New Komeito, which are the ruling parties (in the assembly), have supported 
 it,” Motoshige said.\n\nShe also noted the Osaka Prefectural Assembly is 
 not listening to the concerns, and is simply saying the debris is safe to 
 burn.\n\nOn Wednesday, prefectural and city officials, and, possibly, 
 officials from the Environment Ministry, will meet with residents in Osaka 
 for what is likely to be the final public meeting before the start of the 
 incineration. Osaka officials, however, continue to claim that November’s 
 test incineration met all environmental regulations and proved the waste 
 could therefore be burned in the same manner as conventional garbage.\n\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/02/07/18731622.php
SUMMARY:Rally Speak Out To Stop The Repression Of Anti-Nuclear Actists
LOCATION:50 Fremont St/Mission St.\nSan Francisco, CA
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/02/07/18731622.php
DTSTART:20130211T230000Z
DTEND:20130212T010000Z
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