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CREATED:20140508T225000Z
DESCRIPTION:On Sunday May 11, 2014 at 3 PM will be the monthly speakout and protest to 
 call for the evacuation of the children and families in Fukushima, Japan. 
 The Japanese government is seeking to restart Japan's 50 plants and is also 
 demanding that the children and families return to Fukushima because they 
 claim it has been "decontaminated". The government and TEPCO is also 
 seeking to export nuclear plants around the world.\nSpeakers will talk also 
 discuss the use of the recently passed Secrecy Laws in Japan to silence 
 information about Fukushima and the refusal to release information about 
 the growing number of thyroid cancers.\n\nJapanese Gov't team withholds 
 high radiation data on three Fukushima 
 sites\nhttp://mainichi.jp/english/english/newsselect/news/20140325p2a00m0na008000c.html\nA 
 Cabinet Office team has delayed the release of radiation measurements from 
 three Fukushima Prefecture municipalities, and plans to release them later 
 with lower, recalculated results, the Mainichi learned on March 24.\nThe 
 three municipalities are currently covered by evacuation orders imposed 
 after the March 2011 Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant meltdowns -- evacuation 
 orders the government plans to lift in the near future. According to one 
 source, the original measurements were higher than expected, prompting the 
 Cabinet Office team -- set up to support victims of the nuclear disaster -- 
 to hold the results back over worries they would discourage residents from 
 returning.\nThe Mainichi has acquired documents drawn up in November last 
 year detailing the radiation measurements and intended for release. The 
 documents, however, were never made public. According to this and other 
 sources, the measurements were taken in September last year in the city of 
 Tamura's Miyakoji district, the village of Kawauchi and the village of 
 Iitate by the Japan Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA) and the National Institute 
 of Radiological Sciences (NIRS), using new dosimeters.\nThe measurements 
 were taken by leaving the dosimeters for several days indoors and outdoors 
 at schools, houses and other buildings, as well as in plastic boxes set up 
 on farmland and in the wilderness. The data was given to the Cabinet Office 
 team in mid-October. Most radiation measurements have been done from the 
 air, and the Cabinet Office team wanted to compare results taken on the 
 ground with these measurements and make radiation estimates by job type -- 
 such as farmer or forestry worker -- and the assumption that people would 
 spend eight hours outdoors and 16 indoors per day.\nAccording to an inside 
 source, the Cabinet Office team had noticed that measurements taken with 
 older dosimeters distributed by Fukushima Prefecture municipalities to 
 residents showed radiation measurements much lower than those recorded by 
 aerial surveys. The Cabinet Office team had planned to release the latest 
 measurements at meetings held by a Nuclear Regulation Authority team -- 
 comprising national government officials, experts and prefectural residents 
 -- between September and November last year, putting special emphasis on 
 how low the figures were.\nThe new results, however, were significantly 
 higher than expected, with the largest gap coming in Kawauchi. There, the 
 Cabinet Office team had predicted radiation doses of 1-2 millisieverts per 
 day, but the data showed doses at between 2.6 and 6.6 millisieverts. 
 Cabinet Office team members apparently said that the numbers would "have a 
 huge impact" and "we will need to explain them to the local 
 municipalities," and release of the results was put off.\nAt the request of 
 the Cabinet Office team, the JAEA and NIRS then recalculated the results by 
 ditching the assumption that people would be outside eight hours a day, 
 using instead 2010 statistics on how people spent their time collected by 
 public broadcaster NHK. Under these new assumptions, a farmer was now 
 expected to spend around six hours a day outdoors. The new, lower radiation 
 exposure results were submitted to the Cabinet Office team this month and 
 are scheduled to be released soon to the three municipalities 
 concerned.\nAtsuo Tamura, an official on the Cabinet Office team, admitted 
 the team had drawn up the unreleased documents and that the radiation 
 results had been recalculated, but denied it was hiding anything, saying, 
 "We did not hold the results back because they were too high. We did so 
 because it was necessary to look into whether the assumptions for 
 residents' lifestyle patterns matched reality."\nHowever, associate 
 professor of radiation and hygiene Shinzo Kimura of Dokkyo Medical 
 University told the Mainichi, "The assumption of eight hours a day outside, 
 16 hours inside is commonly used, and it is strange to change it. I can't 
 see it as anything but them fiddling with the numbers to make them come out 
 as they wanted."\nThe Miyakoji district of Tamura is set to have its 
 evacuation order lifted on April 1, and the eastern part of Kawauchi is 
 expected to have its evacuation order lifted sometime during the 2014 
 fiscal year.\nMarch 25, 2014(Mainichi Japan)\n\nForced to Flee Radiation, 
 Fearful Japanese Villagers Are Reluctant to Return “The government and 
 the media say the radiation has been cleaned up, but it’s all 
 lies,”\nhttp://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/28/world/asia/forced-to-flee-radiation-fearful-japanese-villagers-are-reluctant-to-return.html?hp&_r=0\nBy 
 MARTIN FACKLERAPRIL 27, 2014\nPhoto\n\n“The government and the media say 
 the radiation has been cleaned up, but it’s all lies,” said Miyakoji 
 villager Kim Eunja, with her husband, Satoshi Mizuochi. CreditKo Sasaki for 
 The New York Times\n\nMIYAKOJI, Japan — Ever since they were forced to 
 evacuate during the accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant three 
 years ago, Kim Eunja and her husband have refused to return to their 
 hilltop home amid the majestic mountains of this rural village for fear of 
 radiation.\n\nBut now they say they may have no choice. After a nearly $250 
 million radiation cleanup here, the central government this month declared 
 Miyakoji the first community within a 12-mile evacuation zone around the 
 plant to be reopened to residents. The decision will bring an end to the 
 monthly stipends from the plant’s operator that have allowed Ms. Kim to 
 relocate to an apartment in a city an hour away.\n\n“The government and 
 the media say the radiation has been cleaned up, but it’s all lies,” 
 said Ms. Kim, 55, who is from South Korea, and who with her Japanese 
 husband runs a small Korean restaurant outside Miyakoji. “I want to run 
 away, but I cannot. We have no more money.”\n\nShe is not the only one. 
 While the central government and national news media have trumpeted the 
 reopening of Miyakoji as a happy milestone in Japan’s recovery from the 
 devastating March 2011 accident, many residents tell a darker story. They 
 insist their homes remain too dangerous or too damaged to inhabit and that 
 they have not received enough financial compensation to allow them to start 
 anew somewhere else.\n\nPhoto\n\nYoshikuni Munakata works to repair his 
 home, which was abandoned for three years after the accident at the 
 Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. CreditKo Sasaki for The New York 
 Times\nThey criticize the plant’s operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co., or 
 Tepco, for failing to reimburse them for the value of their homes, usually 
 their family’s largest financial asset. Depending on where they lived, 
 they say they have received amounts from half the preaccident value to just 
 $3,000, a tiny fraction of the original value of their homes.\n\nMany 
 villagers complain that these amounts are not enough to move farther away 
 from the plant, which is still leaking radiation, or to repair their 
 traditional wooden farmhouses, which have started to rot and collapse since 
 they were damaged by the earthquake and then abandoned.\n\nAs a result, 
 many evacuees have been forced to live in a state of limbo since the 
 accident, unable to leave barracks-like temporary housing, or end their 
 dependency on Tepco for monthly stipends to live in apartments outside the 
 village. Tepco pays the stipends under orders from the government.\n\nNow 
 they feel growing pressure to return whether they want to or not. The 
 government has declared that the stipends, which range from a few hundred 
 dollars to more than $1,000, will end next March, when temporary housing 
 will also begin to be closed. Villagers who move back before then will 
 receive a $9,000 bonus from Tepco, adding to the pressure to 
 return.\n\n“Tepco is being so stupidly unfair with the compensation,” 
 said Yukei Tomitsuka, the mayor of Tamura, the city that administers 
 Miyakoji. “We are the victims. Should we have to go hat in hand to Tepco 
 to ask for more money?”\n\nExperts call Miyakoji a forerunner of the 
 problems that will be faced by the 150,000 people displaced by the accident 
 over all, as additional communities are reopened as a result of a $36 
 billion government-financed cleanup. They say the evacuees will feel 
 increasing pressure to go back from a government that wants to restore the 
 preaccident status quo as much as possible to limit criticism of the 
 powerful nuclear industry.\n\n“This is inhumane and irresponsible,” 
 said Teruhisa Maruyama, a lawyer who leads the Support Group for Victims of 
 the Nuclear Accident, a Tokyo-based legal organization that helps residents 
 seek increased compensation.\n“The national government knows that full 
 compensation could add up to big money, enough to raise public doubts about 
 the wisdom of using nuclear power in Japan.”\n\nTepco refused to comment, 
 beyond saying that it had so far paid out $36 billion for all types of 
 compensation. “Our company is sincerely listening to the details of each 
 claim,” said Tatsuhiro Yamagishi, a Tepco spokesman. A spokesman for the 
 Education Ministry, which is setting compensation standards, said that the 
 ministry was trying to respond to evacuees’ needs, but that it was hard 
 to meet all the requests. A government committee set up to resolve 
 compensation-related disputes says it has received more than 10,000 
 requests from disgruntled evacuees.\n\nWhen Prime Minister Shinzo Abe 
 visited Tamura last month, Mayor Tomitsuka handed him a letter asking that 
 residents be given more compensation for their homes. The prime minister 
 has yet to reply.\n\nPhoto\n\nBags of radiation-contaminated waste are 
 piled up by the road that leads to Miyakoji, which has been reopened to 
 residents. CreditKo Sasaki for The New York Times\nAlmost 500 residents of 
 Miyakoji have recently joined one of two separate group lawsuits demanding 
 that Tepco pay more compensation, a rare show of rising frustrations in a 
 close-knit Japanese rural community, which usually abhors conflict-causing 
 litigation.\n\nWhile many evacuees, particularly families with children, 
 say they do not want to go back because of radiation, the government says 
 that Miyakoji is safe. Radiation levels were relatively low there to begin 
 with, since most of the plant’s radiation plume missed the area. The 
 massive cleanup, which involved some 1,300 workers scraping up contaminated 
 dirt and resurfacing areas around homes with clean gravel, lowered 
 radiation levels even further.\n\nOn a recent trip here, radiation measured 
 up to 0.23 microsieverts per hour, about three times preaccident levels but 
 below those of some communities outside the evacuation zone. Whether or not 
 that level is safe is a contentious question: Experts admit that they know 
 little about the health effects of long-term exposure to low-dose 
 radiation.\n\nAuthorities had hoped that Miyakoji could serve as a model 
 for repopulating the evacuated communities. So far, only about a third of 
 residents have returned, and most of them are older villagers who feel they 
 have less to worry about from the long-term cancer risks of 
 radiation.\n\nAll of the village’s 3,000 residents were evacuated the day 
 after the March 11, 2011, earthquake and tsunami knocked out cooling 
 systems at the plant. The majority of villagers, who lived farther than 12 
 miles from the plant, were paid $3,000 to cover damage to their homes and 
 were allowed to return six months later. Most have yet to move back even 
 now, mainly for fear of radiation, though some complain that stores and 
 other services have not reopened.\n\nThe 357 villagers with homes inside 
 the 12-mile zone were not allowed to return until April 1, more than three 
 years after the accident. They received the highest compensation, about 
 half the preaccident value of their homes.\n\nOne was Yoshikuni Munakata, 
 63, who on a recent afternoon was repairing a collapsed shed at his farm 
 about nine miles southwest of the destroyed plant.\n\nMr. Munakata said the 
 $50,000 that he had received in compensation was not nearly enough to fix 
 the old farmhouse built by his grandfather, where the wooden floors warped 
 so badly that the sliding doors no longer close. But while he could not 
 move back, he also cannot leave. He said he tried to do so right after the 
 accident, going to the northern island of Hokkaido to start a new life as a 
 van driver. However, he said he gave up after 18 months for lack of money, 
 and came back to collect his monthly living stipends.\n\nHe said he is 
 unsure of what will happen to him once those stipends end in 
 March.\n\n“My home is a total loss,” said Mr. Munakata. He said he was 
 not afraid of radiation because he used to work at the Fukushima Daiichi 
 plant before retiring. “The compensation payments force us to come back, 
 but they are not enough to let us live here again.”\n\nAmong those who 
 have not come back are Ms. Kim and her husband, Satoshi Mizuochi. They sank 
 their life savings of about $300,000 into their home, where they had 
 planned to spend their remaining years.\n\nWith few buyers likely to step 
 forward, they say their home is now essentially worthless. But with only a 
 tiny income from their restaurant, they say they will probably have to go 
 back once their rent stipends end in March. “They want to say that 
 everything is back to normal so they can keep their nuclear plants,” said 
 Mr. Mizuochi, 57, who helps his wife at the restaurant. “Failing to 
 compensate us for our losses is a way of pressuring us to go 
 back.”\nMakiko Inoue contributed reporting.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2014/05/08/18755521.php
SUMMARY:Japan Abe Gov Stop Restarting Your Nuke Plants-Rally And Speakout
LOCATION:San Francisco Japanese Consulate\n275 Battery St. Suite 2100\nSan 
 Francisco, CA\nNear Battery and Market BART Embarcadero Station\n
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2014/05/08/18755521.php
DTSTART:20140511T220000Z
DTEND:20140511T230000Z
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