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DESCRIPTION:Every 11th of the month, activists rally and speak out against the restart 
 of Japanese nuclear plants despite the lessons of the Fukushima meltdown. 
 This month we will also demand that Congresswomen Nancy Pelosi and the 
 Obama administration stop pushing Japan to restart their fifty nuclear 
 plants.\n Two years after the meltdown, the "clean up" continues with 
 breakdowns and the Abe government continues to push with US Obama support 
 to re-open the 50 remaining nuclear plants in Japan. \nThe Japanese 
 government is also pushing to burn nuclear rubble around the country and is 
 refusing to allow for the evacuation of the children and people of 
 Fukushima. In fact the Japanese government and the IAEA is telling the 
 people of Japan that they can overcome radiation and the Fukushima area can 
 be "decontaminated" and that people should move back to within four mile of 
 the Fukushima nuclear meltdown.\nThey are also arresting and harassing 
 anti-nuclear activists in arrests around the country. The Japanese 
 government is making a clear effort to silence the truth  about the 
 continued dangers.\nTwo Year On, Will the Lessons Of Fukushima Go 
 Unheeded?\nhttp://occupy.com/article/two-years-will-lessons-fukushima-go-unheeded\nMON, 
 3/11/2013 - BY PETER RUGH\n New  0  0  0   \n\nThe word Fukushima 
 translates into English as "happy island," and Diiachi as "beautiful." But 
 the triple nuclear reactor meltdowns at the Fukushima-Diiachi power station 
 on March 11, 2011, two years ago today, left a mess that continues to be 
 anything but happy or pretty for Japan's outraged citizens.\n\nHundreds of 
 thousands of people have taken to the streets since the disaster, calling 
 for the country to move off nuclear power for good. The largest 
 demonstrations occurred last summer, when 200,000 marched on then-Prime 
 Minister Yoshihiko Noda's residence demanding the government back off plans 
 to restart two of the country's 50 reactors, which had been offline since 
 3/11.\n\nIn Western Japan, protesters blockaded the Ohi plant containing 
 the first of the two reactors set to restart, reportedly forcing employees 
 to commute by boat. Seventy percent of Japan's population remains in favor 
 of a nuke-free future, but the government has, so far, ignored 
 demonstrators' demands. Over the weekend, large rallies were again held in 
 Tokyo commemorating the dark anniversary of the meltdowns.\n\nThe 
 earthquake-triggered tsunami that struck Fukushima on March 11, 2011, is 
 often blamed for the disaster. In reality, it was a nuclear industry 
 composed of lax government regulators, a cost skimming mega-corporation and 
 Japan's powerful mafia, the Yakuza, that managed to decimate much of 
 Northeastern Japan. It's a tale that nuclear-fueled nations across the 
 world could learn from if they wish to prevent future 
 Fukushimas.\n\nApproximately 17,000 people were killed when the tsunami 
 struck Japan's northeastern coast, but the deadly effects of the estimated 
 900 quadrillion becquerels of radiation released from the meltdowns will 
 take longer to reveal themselves. The first cases of illness induced by 
 radiation have only recently begun cropping up among Japanese children. In 
 February, authorities detected ten cases of cancer among children from 
 Fukushima Prefecture.\n\nThe region's economy is also fighting for its 
 life. Fields of Fukushima's famed oranges were left to rot on the vine and 
 now the land grows wild without hands to till it. As of two weeks ago, a 
 fish caught near the plant registered radiation levels 2,500 times the 
 government's recommended limit. It will likely take decades to restore the 
 region's agriculture and fishing industries. Experts have given cleanup 
 operations at Fukushima a centuries-long timetable.\n\nIn the immediate 
 wake of the disaster, a government spokesperson told reporters, “There 
 has been no meltdown.” Masataka Shimizu, president of Tokyo Electric 
 Power (Tepco), one of the world's largest utilities and the operator of the 
 crippled plant, described the tsunami as an “unforeseeable 
 disaster.”\n\nYet an internal report conducted by Tepco, three years 
 prior to the disaster, warned that the company should fortify the plant to 
 withstand waves higher than 5.7 meters. Company higher-ups dismissed the 
 reports' findings as unrealistic and did nothing. Waves nearly 15 meters 
 high eventually bore down on the plant.\n\nIn the weeks leading up to the 
 tsunami, Tepco also failed to inspect 33 pieces of equipment vital to 
 stabilizing the plant's reactors in the event of an emergency, according to 
 Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (now the Nuclear Regulation 
 Authority). The agency described Tepco's maintenance of the 40-year-old 
 facility as “inadequate” and its monitoring of equipment as 
 “insufficient.”\n\nStress tests conducted by regulators found breakage 
 in backup generators needed as a last resort to keep reactors cool. Those 
 generators would later be disabled by the waters of the Pacific, leading to 
 multiple meltdowns.\n\nAn independent committee authorized by Japan's 
 parliament to investigate the disaster reported that Tepco, along with 
 regulators, had “failed to correctly develop the most basic safety 
 requirements—such as assessing the probability of damage, preparing for 
 containing collateral damage from such a disaster, and developing 
 evacuation plans for the public in the case of a serious radiation 
 release.”\n\nWhen it came to stabilizing and decommissioning the 
 reactors, who did Tepco call? The Yakuza. Thanks to lax governmental 
 oversight, the mafia has long been entrenched in the Japanese nuclear 
 industry, providing plant operators with a steady supply of poorly trained, 
 low wage workers through subcontractor front companies to do the highest 
 risk jobs.\n\nSometimes referred to as "nuclear gypsies," nearly 90 percent 
 of Japan's nuclear plant workforce are contract laborers. The Yakuza draws 
 them from the bottom rungs of society; the homeless, the chronically 
 unemployed and members of Japan's outcast Burakumin minority. Sometimes 
 those stepping into hazmat suits are working off a debt they owe the 
 Yakuza.\n\nNuclear gypsies have been on the front lines of Fukushima from 
 the get-go. One worker told Reuters, "I get stomach aches. I am constantly 
 stressed. When I'm back in my room, all I can do is worry about the next 
 day. They should give us a medal." Instead they are rewarded with 840 yen 
 an hour, nearly half the typical wage a construction worker in the region 
 receives.\n\nVideo obtained by Japan's Asahi Shimbun newspaper last summer 
 showed one foreman ordering workers at Fukushima to put lead shields over 
 their dosimeters in order to doctor radiation readings. Further allegations 
 of health and safety violations abound. Outsourcing the clean-up job to 
 nuclear gypsies at the whip of the Yakuza has enabled Tepco to shift costs 
 and responsibility off their shoulders.\n\nFormer U.S. Defense Secretary 
 Donald Rumsfeld employed a similar strategy during the invasion and 
 occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq, outsourcing the tasks of feeding and 
 providing healthcare and protection to troops, even – in many cases – 
 the job of fighting the wars themselves.\n\n“The primary difference 
 between Tepco and the Yakuza,” a parliament member from Japan's rightwing 
 Liberal Democratic Party told The Atlantic's Jake Adelstein, “is they 
 have different corporate logos,” adding: “They both are essentially 
 criminal organizations that place profits above the safety and welfare of 
 the residents where they operate; they both exploit their 
 workers.”\n\nThe lawmaker speculated that the Yakuza might care more 
 about what happens at the plant since many members of the criminal 
 underworld involved in the decommissioning effort live in the area, unlike 
 Tepco's executives who are cloistered in Tokyo highrises 160 miles 
 southwest of Fukushima Prefecture. For them, he said, “Fukushima is just 
 the equivalent of a parking lot.”\n\nJapanese taxpayers continue to bare 
 the cost of decommissioning the plant and of keeping Tepco afloat. The 
 corporation received a $13 billion dollar bailout last year and has raised 
 rates by 10 percent on residential customers in order to pay back the 
 funds. The company estimates cleanup costs could run as high as $125 
 billion over the next 10 years and is seeking additional 
 funds.\n\nMeanwhile, the price of Fukushima in both economic and human 
 terms has turned many against nuclear power. Olav Hohmeyer, an 
 environmental adviser to the German government, reflected that the $3.7 
 billion in minimum reactor insurance that German plant operators were 
 required to pay would be merely “enough to buy the stamps for the letters 
 of condolence” should things go the way of Fukushima.\n\nGermany has 
 begun weening itself off nuclear power at the advice of than ethics 
 commission established in the wake of Fukushima. Eight reactors in the 
 country have so far been shuttered. A combination of renewable energy and 
 conservation has filled the gap, although murmurs are growing about a spike 
 in energy costs.\n\nAmerica, where corporations and not ethics commissions 
 decide policy, has taken the opposite route. In 2012, the U.S. Nuclear 
 Regulatory Commission (NRC) approved two fresh reactor licenses at Plant 
 Vogtle near Augusta, Georgia. Also with NRC approval, General Electric, the 
 designer of the reactors at Fukushima, has begun construction of a new 
 uranium enrichment facility in Wilmington, North Carolina.\n\nPresident 
 Obama was forced to scale back plans to triple the number of reactors in 
 the U.S. after the Fukushima disaster, yet nonetheless he has remained 
 steadfast to his commitment to nuclear power, which comprises a powerful 
 part of his donor base.\n\nExelon, one the nation's largest plant 
 operators, has described itself as “The President's Utility.” Employees 
 of the firm, which also has coal and solar holdings, have handed Obama 
 nearly half a million dollars in campaign contributions over the years. In 
 return, the president awarded Exelon a $200 million stimulus grant from the 
 Energy Department. And, under terms described by The New York Times as 
 “extremely generous,” government lent the corporation $646 million to 
 build photovoltaic panels in California.\n\nNot that the corporation is 
 abandoning reactors for that great reactor in the sky called the sun; 
 they're simply diversifying with the president's help. If the recent 
 nomination of Ernest Moniz as Energy Secretary – a nuclear scientist as 
 well as cheerleader for the fracking industry – is any indication, we can 
 expect more atomic favoritism throughout the rest of Obama's second 
 term.\n\nThe NRC has estimated that a U.S. nuclear disaster on par with 
 Fukushima could cause more than $500 billion in property damage. Setting 
 aside a review of that assertion by the Congressional Governmental 
 Accountability Office -- which found that the agency had low-balled the 
 figure by half -- it's still quite a whopper.\n\nUnder the 1957 
 Price-Anderson Act, yearly insurance premiums required of plant operators 
 are caped at $375 million. The non-profit advocacy group Public Citizen 
 calculates this arrangement leaves taxpayers footing around 98% of the 
 bill. Originally designed to stimulate the atomic industry, which was then 
 in its infancy, the act was renewed in 2005 and has been padding the 
 pockets of powerful energy conglomerates going on six decades.\n\nOver that 
 time span, most of America's 100-plus reactors, originally designed to last 
 four decades, have entered their geriatric years. All the while, the NRC 
 has remained as committed as their Japaneses counterparts to the industry's 
 desire to keep costs low. The agency has granted hundreds of fire safety 
 exemptions to plant operators through a process it describes as 
 “enforcement discretion.”\n\nExactly how many of these exemptions 
 remains uncertain, since the NRC does not keep - or at least does not 
 release to the public - a detailed tally. According to a review of NRC 
 records by the investigative website ProPublica, fires occur on average 10 
 times a year at U.S. nuclear plants. Flames can sever the link between a 
 reactor and its control room.\n\nAnd Fukushima demonstrates what happens 
 when that umbilical cord is cut.\n\nWhy has Germany moved off nuclear just 
 as the U.S. is further ramping up its operations? For one, Germany has been 
 host to a decades-long anti-nuclear struggle, and people power seems to 
 have prevailed. In the U.S., likewise, people will have to hit the pavement 
 if they expect the lessons of Fukushima to be heeded on American 
 soil.\n\nIn Japan, the public's faith in authorities has severely eroded 
 since the fallout of Fukushima. The new conservative government of Prime 
 Minister Shinzō Abe has announced plans to restart six reactors by the end 
 of this year, and even to build new ones. Which is why, living under a 
 corporate-government alliance that refuses to heed the lessons and evidence 
 of the past, the Japanese public is putting its hopes in the only forum it 
 has left: the streets.\n\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/04/05/18734731.php
SUMMARY:Stop Restarting Of Japan NUKE Plants
LOCATION:50 Fremont St. San Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/04/05/18734731.php
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DTEND:20130412T000000Z
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