BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
X-WR-CALNAME:www.indybay.org
PRODID:-//indybay/ical// v1.0//EN
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:Indybay-18769471
SEQUENCE:18889522
CREATED:20150304T025400Z
DESCRIPTION:3/11 All Out On 4th Anniversary of Fukushima Meltdowns\nAll Out March 11, 
 2015 3:00 PM\nInternational Day Of Action-Rally And Speakout At San 
 Francisco Japanese Consulate 275 Battery St/California St. San 
 Francisco\nOn Fourth Anniversary Of Fukushima-Stop The Release of Thousands 
 Of Tons Of Radioactive Water From Fukushima\nMarch 11, 2015 people 
 throughout the world will be acting to protest the continuing danger at 
 Fukushima.\nThe Japanese pro-war Abe government has announced that the 
 tanks surrounding Fukushima are full and they will release thousands of 
 tons of radioactive water. 
 \nhttp://ajw.asahi.com/article/0311disaster/fukushima/AJ201412130042\nThey 
 also are intent in reopening the nearly 50 nuclear power plants that were 
 shutdown after the earthquake. They are also exporting nuclear power plants 
 to Turkey and throughout the world to make more profits in this 
 industry.\nThe government is also ordering families and children back to 
 Fukushima telling them that it has been decontaminated despite continuing 
 radiation and a growing epidemic of thyroid cancer cases. The government 
 refused as well using a newly passed secrecy law to release information on 
 cancer surgeries in the Fukushima region.\nPlease join the rally at the San 
 Francisco Consulate 275 Battery St. San Francisco at 3:00 PM. Reading of 
 letters will start at 2:30 PM from around the world. Also there will be a 
 march to PG&E on 245 Market St. near Spear St. San Francisco demanding the 
 closure of Diablo Canyon Nuclear Plant\n\nThe 32nd NNA Monthly Rally-The 
 Fukushima Fourth Anniversary Rally\n2 :30 pm      The letters to PM Abe 
 will be read loud\n3 :00             The speaking out begins\nAroud 3:30  
 Some more letters will be read loud by actual writers.\n4 :00             
 We start to march to the PGE headquarter on the Market St. to demand the 
 closure of Diablo Canyon Nuclear Plant\n                      \n4 :30       
        Rally Ends\nPlease wear something yellow, scarf, cap and 
 whatever!\nPlease bring many people, many signs and your 
 energy!\n\nSponsored by No Nukes Action Committee, Fukushima 
 Response\nhttp://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/\nhttp://fukushimafourthanniversaryevents.blogspot.com\nhttps://www.facebook.com/fukushimawatchblogspotcom?_rdr\nhttps://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/\nnonukesactioncommittee@gmail.com\n\n\nAlso 
 please sign the international petition\n\nPetition To Stop Release Of 
 Radioactive Water From Fukushima Into Pacific 
 Ocean\nhttp://www.thepetitionsite.com/136/663/239/dont-dump-radioactive-water-into-the-pacific-from-fukushima-tanks/ 
 \n\nDear Friends,\n\nEvidently this new petition has struck a deep chord.  
 In less than 24 hours, there are over 200 signers, many from Europe. 
 \n\nBriefly, there are 866 storage tanks at Fukushima Daiichi, each holding 
 1000 TONS of highly radioactive water, which has been used to cool the 
 reactor cores.  This makes a total of 866,000 TONS of water, with 350 tons 
 added every day.  In addition, there are 13,400 tons of highly contaminated 
 water in Reactor 1, 15,800 tons in Reactor 2, 16,900 tons in Reactor 3 and 
 no more fuel but 14,500 tons of water in Reactor 4, a total of 60,600 tons! 
  The Japan NRA wants all this water to be discharged into the Pacific, as 
 the site is running out of space to build more tanks.\n\nPlease sign and 
 disseminate this new petition:  
 \nhttp://www.thepetitionsite.com/136/663/239/dont-dump-radioactive-water-into-the-pacific-from-fukushima-tanks/ 
 \n\nEven without dumping water from the tanks,  there is lots of 
 radioactive water contaminating the Pacific from Fukushima. The 
 groundwater, which was NOT used to cool reactors by TEPCO, comes into 
 contact with the molten cores which have broken through their containers.  
 At least 350 TONS of this contaminated groundwater finds its way into the 
 Pacific EVERY DAY, despite the efforts of TEPCO to catch it in trenchesand 
 contain it with ice walls or cement- these efforts have failed.   And the 
 radioactivity in the groundwater keeps increasing.\n\n1/13/15  
 http://nuclear-news.net/2015/01/14/radioactive-contamination-level-jumped-over-57-times-outside-of-underground-wall/\nCs-134/137 
 and all β nuclides (including Sr-90) density showed the rapid increase in 
 groundwater, according to Tepco.   The sample was taken in the seaside of 
 Reactor 2. Sampling date was 1/12/2015.     Compared to the previous 
 measurement of 1/8/2015, Cs-134/137 density rose up by 57 times, all β 
 nuclides density also rose up by 57 times.   This is the highest reading 
 measured from this boring. Tepco hasn’t identified the reason. This 
 boring is located outside of the underground wall to stop contaminated 
 groundwater flowing to the 
 sea.\nhttp://enenews.com/huge-radiation-spike-detected-fukushima-plant-record-levels-workers-attempting-stop-radioactive-material-flowing-ocean-cesium-7500-week\nFor 
 pumping water groundwater observation hole No.1-12 taken on January 12, 
 cesium 134, cesium 137, cobalt 60 and total beta value is higher as 
 compared with the previous value, the maximum value previously is 
 detected.\n	• Cesium-134: 140 Bq/L [~7,500% above Jan. 5 level; new 
 record high]\n	• Cesium-137: 470 Bq/L [~7,500% above Jan. 5 level; new 
 record high]\n	• Cobalt-60: 1.9 Bq/L [Quadruple previous record high set 
 in 2013]\n	• β (all beta): 15,000 Bq/L [~6,000% above Jan. 8 level; 
 ~1,300% above previous record high]\nNote that observation hole No. 1-12 is 
 near the Unit 2 trench which is filled with thousands of tons of highly 
 radioactive water.  Tepco is attempting to seal the trench, but has failed 
 to do so. According to page 2 of Tepco’s presentation to Japan’s 
 Nuclear Regulatory Authority on Dec. 26, 2014 the only part of the trench 
 that has been blocked is right next to No. 1-12 (see map on 
 right).\n\n\nCould all this radioactivity in the ocean explain massive 
 dieoffs of birds and sickness in sea 
 mammals?\n\nhttp://enenews.com/unprecedented-mass-die-birds-along-entire-west-coast-grisly-scene-beaches-covered-carcasses-professor-tragic-weve-never-like-ignore-peril-canary-coalmine-telling-scrambling-figure-whats-going-ec\nCommon 
 murres and Cassin’s auklets dead on the beach in great numbers… Oregon 
 is thecataclysm’s epicenter… He doesn’t expect the crush of deaths to 
 let up any time soon… [It's] up to 100 times greater than normal annual 
 death rates...  Unfortunately the Cassins are the canary in the coalmine 
 for us, so they’re telling us something is going on. To put it mildly, 
 we’re still scrambling to figure out what’s going on with the 
 ecosystem… Of course, everybody always wants to point the finger at 
 climate change. The thing about climate change is it’s a very slow, 
 steady change. 
 \n\nhttp://enenews.com/abc-mysterious-surge-sick-sea-lions-all-along-california-coast-experts-extremely-concerned-tv-infested-parasites-very-seriously-ill-very-bad-shape-death-rate-1500-top-animal-hospital-videos\nABC 
 Los Angeles, Jan 12, 2015: New at 5, a big increase in the number of 
 stranded sea lions being rescued… Some of them very seriously ill… 
 nearly a dozen sea lions at the Pacific Marine Mammal Center. Facilities 
 across California are reporting a massive increase in the number of sea 
 lions needing to be rescued in 2015… Baby sea lions [are] in very bad 
 shape.\n\nPlease sign and disseminate 
 http://www.thepetitionsite.com/136/663/239/dont-dump-radioactive-water-into-the-pacific-from-fukushima-tanks/\n\n\nTHE 
 32ND NNA MONTHLY RALLY-THE FUKUSHIMA FOURTH ANNIVERSARY 
 RALLY\n\n早くも３月、福島過酷事故から４年目の３月１１日はすぐそこです。\nこの４年を振り返り、この先何をして行くべきかみんなで考えましょう。何ができるか、とりあえず思い当たる事をやっていきましょう。集会デモはその一つです。忘れていた人々を喚起します。\n小さな声が大きくなっていきます。輪が広がって行きます。世論が変わって行きます。押しつぶされても、大きな声と意志はいつか政府の流れを変えて行きます。\n今度の集会には、ペタルマ、デイヴィス、サンタクルーズからカープールでたくさんの参加者が予定されています。なお集会デモはいつもより３０分前の２時半から始まります。安倍首相への短い手紙が今現在１００通近く集まり、これをなるべくたくさん声を上げて読む為です。IWJのサンフランシスコ支局も協力して下さって、３０分早くインターネット中継が始まります。\n以下、時間表です。\nThe 
 32nd NNA Monthly Rally-The Fukushima Fourth Anniversary Rally\n2 :30 pm     
  The letters to PM Abe will be read loud\n3 :00             The speaking 
 out begins\nAroud 3:30  Some more letters will be read loud by actual 
 writers.\n4 :00             We start to march to the PG&E headquarter on 
 the Market St.\n                       (Either at front of J.Consulate or 
 PG&E, we might have a demonstration of Short Die In.)\n4 :30              
 dismiss.\nPlease wear something yellow, scarf, cap and whatever!\nPlease 
 bring many people, many signs and your 
 energy!\nでは、３月１１日２時半にSF領事館前にぜひ集まって下さい！\n\n3/11/15 
 EMERGENCY ACTION WORLDWIDE TO STOP JAPANESE ABE GOVERNMENT RELEASE OF 
 RADIOACTIVE WATER INTO PACIFIC\n3/11/15 Emergency Action Worldwide To Stop 
 Japanese Abe Government Release Of Radioactive Water Into 
 Pacific\nEmergency Action On Wednesday March 11 At All Japanese Consulates 
 And Embassies\nThe No Nukes Action Committee And Fukushima Response are 
 calling for emergency demonstrations\nand rallies at all Japanese 
 Consulates and Embassies throughout the world on March 11, 2015, the 
 fourth\nanniversary of the nuclear meltdowns at Fukushima. The Japanese Abe 
 government has ordered the\nrelease of thousands of tons of highly 
 radioactive contaminated water into the Pacific Ocean threatening\nthe 
 health and safety of people and the environment throughout the Pacific 
 Rim.\nPlease contact us with your plans and video tape your actions at 
 Japanese consulates throughout the world.\nWe need to put the Abe 
 administration on notice that this release of radioactive water into the 
 Pacifica is\nopposed by people throughout the 
 world.\nhttp://fukushimafourthanniversaryevents.blogspot.com\nhttps://www.facebook.com/fukushimawatchblogspotcom?_rdr\nhttps://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/\nnonukesactioncommittee@gmail.com\nPetition 
 To Stop Release Of Radioactive Water From Fukushima Into Pacific 
 Ocean\nhttp://www.thepetitionsite.com/136/663/239/dont-dump-radioactive-water-into-the-pacific-from-fukushima-tanks/\n\nReport 
 from Fukushima and the Abe government expansion and export of nuclear 
 plants" Partial 
 Transcript\nhttps://japansafety.wordpress.com/2015/02/06/report-from-fukushima-and-the-abe-government-expansion-and-export-of-nuclear-plants/\nFEBRUARY 
 6, 2015 BY MELANIE\n\nThe Nuclear Free California Network hosted this 
 conference on Jan. 24 and 25, 2015, in San Luis Obispo near the Diablo 
 Canyon.\n\n[Note: All text in quotations is directly quoted from the 
 speakers’ translator, Carole Hisasue, who represents Mothers For Peace, 
 and all other text is a paraphrased version of Hisasue’s 
 translation.]\n\nThe first speaker, Chieko Shiina from Fukushima and a 
 supporter of the Fukushima Collaborative Clinic, says that radiation 
 “doesn’t discriminate between organisms. It destroys everything.” In 
 Futaba City after the March 2011 triple meltdown, a company that raised 
 ostriches for slaughter released its ostriches into the streets, exposing 
 them to radiation. People were evacuated, but all animals – cows, dogs, 
 cats and pets – remained in highly contaminated areas. Shiina gave three 
 examples of things that are happening in Fukushima.\n\n(1) Already 85 
 children have had surgeries for thyroid cancer. One hundred and thirteen 
 children are suspected of having cancer. These startling figures are a 
 reality despite the fact that the Professor Yamashita Shunichi, former 
 president of the exploratory committee for Fukushima Prefectural People’s 
 Health Management Survey, said a child has a one in a million chance of 
 getting cancer from exposure to radiation from Fukushima. In reality, that 
 probability is one is 3,000 – an epidemic. Mr. Sugami, head of the 
 National Cancer Research Center, estimated that cancer rates in Fukushima 
 have risen 61 times. And still, the central and Fukushima prefectural 
 governments claim that these rates are not a result of radiation exposure. 
 “How long does the government think that we’ll be silent about this, in 
 light of this epidemic? My anger will never die down. And then to think of 
 the parents of the small children, how worried they must be. That’s one 
 of the reasons why I set up this collaborative clinic in Fukushima. It’s 
 operated solely by donations from people and is completely independent of 
 the government.” The Fukushima adults are also experiencing health 
 problems from radiation exposure – increased rates of thyroid cancer, 
 heart attacks, leukemia, cataracts and many other health problems. It’s 
 up to us to gather and disseminate this information.\n\n(2) The Japanese 
 government has opened a road that runs about nine miles from Fukushima 
 Daiichi. It is considered open but “not for use.” They say that when 
 you do use this road, you must have all the windows rolled up, you can’t 
 use the air conditioning, and there’s no parking allowed on the road. 
 “And of course, no pedestrians, motorbikes or bicycles are allowed.” So 
 why did they even open it? It was just a front to allow the government to 
 continue justifying its agenda: Radiation doesn’t affect Fukushima; It is 
 safe to hold the Olympics in Japan; Restarting other nuclear plants and 
 going to war is fine. “I cannot forgive the government. They are 
 murderers. This is definitely a holocaust.”\n\n(3) “I’m sure you all 
 know about the temporary housing, where the evacuees have had to go and 
 have been there for many years now.” The temporary housing is made up of 
 flimsy shacks separated by plywood. “These are the people that are from 
 the rural areas of Japan. They had lots of land. They were used to living 
 out in the open with tons and tons of space. Now they’ve been living in 
 these cramped quarters separated by flimsy plywood for four years now. They 
 can’t go home. There’s nowhere to go. The radiation is too high. They 
 used to be getting compensation from the government, but that’s been 
 stopped. They used to be getting a transportation allowance, but that’s 
 been stopped too. Now they’re just forgotten people completely cut 
 off.” These people are suffering from psychological damage too, like 
 insomnia. There are also higher rates of suicide. “These are related 
 deaths but not directly related. The government will never seen them as 
 being a direct effect of the radiation. So that’s the reality of a 
 nuclear radiation war because you can’t see the radiation, and there’s 
 no data going around. The media won’t report on it. Everything is just 
 being swept under the rug.”\n\nThere are other effects to children’s 
 health. They cannot play outside in sandboxes anymore. The government’s 
 solution was to built indoor sandboxes – a glass pen with sand brought in 
 from a different prefecture. We think it’s best to temporarily evacuate 
 the children to allow them to play outdoors, rest, relax and regain 
 strength in uncontaminated prefectures. But the government is promoting the 
 return of Fukushima evacuees to their hometowns, claiming that it is now 
 safe. As a result of the way the government has been handling the 
 situation, the people can’t even talk about their fears of radiation. 
 They want to take their children out of those areas for the weekend so they 
 can play outdoors, but they don’t talk about it with their neighbors, 
 making up excuses why they are taking short vacations. Speaking about 
 radiation exposure has become taboo. “It’s also divided families, for 
 example, families that are still running farms. The grandparents think that 
 the vegetables they are growing are safe, even growing them organically, 
 and they want their grandchildren to eat the vegetables. But the mother 
 thinks, ‘Oh no. I cannot possibly give these vegetables to my 
 children.’ And she will throw them away, but she cannot even talk about 
 that to her own parents.”\n\nLast March 11, a Japanese news station 
 called “Hodo Station,” aired a program on Fukushima. The director 
 promised to make a follow-up show, telling an interviewee that they would 
 be airing it soon. Instead, the program was never aired, and the director 
 died. The director told one of the interviewees, a mother, that if she 
 hears of his death, she should not believe that it was a suicide, no matter 
 what others are saying. “There is no truth in the media in Japan today. 
 There are all sorts of these mysterious events happening that are still 
 unexplained and not investigated.” According to the Japanese 
 government’s new Secrecy Act, any anti-government activities are 
 prohibited, such as a gathering like this. You cannot voice an 
 anti-government opinion. Soon the government will be stopping more and more 
 meetings like this. The damage caused by the nuclear accident was not just 
 radiation exposure. “There have been damage to our liberties, damage to 
 our future for a peaceful Japan, and I want to let you know that I am so 
 glad to be connected with you and to be able to speak with you today. I 
 believe that nuclear power is just another form of nuclear war and nuclear 
 weapons. And this is a struggle between the one percent and the 99 percent, 
 in which everything is done for the profits of the one percent, and the 99 
 percent are just not important enough. So I believe that when the 99 
 percent can get together and gain strength, then we have hope for the 
 future. Our lives are for ourselves. It’s not for the one percent. We 
 should not stand for it. Let’s fight together.”\n\nShiina continues her 
 speech at 39:45 minutes. She explains the growing success of the Fukushima 
 Collaborative Clinic, which has volunteer doctors who test the thyroids of 
 children and adults, including Fukushima Daiichi workers, and is solely 
 funded by donations. By supporting the clinic’s efforts, she feels that 
 she is at war with the Japanese government, which hides the realities of 
 the Fukushima disaster in order to support its pro-nuclear policy. Despite 
 the government’s claim that nuclear power is now safe due to new safety 
 measures and precautions, Shiina questions this logic by the sheer fact 
 that many nuclear power plants in Japan sit on fault lines, and the 
 government has been distributing potassium iodide to populations living 
 near nuclear plants (just in case). She also questions the new safety 
 measures. For example, the government wants to restart a power plant in 
 Hokkaido, the northern-most island of Japan that has a long winter. 
 Evacuation drills have been conducted in the summertime, but citizens 
 question why they shouldn’t be prepared in the event of a nuclear 
 disaster during the winter.\n\nShiina advocates for labor unions and worker 
 strikes with citizen support in order to prevent new nuclear power plants 
 to be built and old plants to be restarted. There is a railway that runs 
 close to Fukushima Daiichi, the Joban line. In its effort to revive 
 Fukushima’s economy, the government tried to reopen the line, which is 
 completely contaminated, inside and out. The Doro Mito railway workers 
 refused to work on the line because they didn’t want to work in highly 
 radioactive conditions, and they didn’t want passengers to be exposed to 
 those conditions. “I believe that if the citizens and the workers all 
 join together and work together as one, anything is possible.”\n\n* * 
 *\n\nThe second speaker is Chizu Hamada from No Nukes Action. [Her speech 
 begins 33 minutes in.] Hamada explains that only the elderly evacuees from 
 Fukushima Prefecture want to return to their homes. The young people, 
 especially mothers, do not want to return. However, the Japanese government 
 says certain areas are safe to live in and threaten the evacuees to move 
 back by cutting off their compensation one year after their evacuation zone 
 has been lifted, i.e. deemed safe to inhabit. The government simply 
 doesn’t want to continue paying compensation.\n\nSecondly, there have 
 been many mysterious deaths related to radiation exposure that the local 
 government has not recognized. The government counts 1,758 deaths related 
 to Fukushima radiation, but there are actually many more. This 
 misinformation is related to the new Secrecy Act, which makes exposing such 
 information punishable.\n\nThirdly, Japan’s nuclear front has two good 
 pieces of news. Last year, Kansai Electric Power Co. lost its suit in 
 trying to restart to reactors at the Oi Nuclear Power Plant in Fukui. The 
 verdict stated, “Human lives are above the profit of industries.” 
 Contributing to this verdict was a lawsuit brought against an electric 
 company by the husband of a Korean cancer victim, claiming that radiation 
 from a nuclear power plant caused his wife’s cancer. This is one of the 
 few instances in Japan were there is an accepted causal relationship 
 between radiation exposure from a nuclear power plant and cancer.\n\n* * 
 *\n\nThe third speaker is Isamu “Sam” Kanno of No Nukes Asian Action, 
 an anti-nuclear organization that brought a class action lawsuit, with 
 3,853 plaintiffs from 39 countries, against GE, Hitachi and Toshiba for 
 damages resulting from the Fukushima disaster. No Nukes Asian Action has 
 gathered 1,290 plaintiffs from Japan, 138 from the United States, 1,000 
 from Korea and 600 from Taiwan, along other countries such as Germany and 
 Mongolia. “Basically this is an action against the fact that the 
 manufacturers of the nuclear reactors are exempt, by law (the 
 Price-Anderson law, 1957, an amendment to the Atomic Energy Act), from any 
 liability. … ”\n\n” … Eisenhower made the Atoms For Peace speech in 
 1953, and it was strange because in 1945, two Japanese cities were 
 destroyed by nuclear weapons. We see [Atoms For Peace] as a way to justify 
 holding on to nuclear weapons and nuclear materials. Already the UK and the 
 Soviets had nuclear power since 1955. In the 60 years since then, many 
 countries have gotten nuclear power. What have we gotten from it? Just some 
 steam generation.” The United States persuaded Japan to build nuclear 
 reactors in a country riddled with earthquake faults, but this wasn’t for 
 nuclear power; it was for the potential of nuclear weapons production. In 
 2012, the United States supported the restart of the Oi nuclear reactors. 
 “There is a slogan going around in Japan saying that nuclear power plants 
 are a nuclear weapon aimed at ourselves. …” The United States has not 
 been creating new nuclear power plants for a long time, but the problem in 
 Asia is that countries like Japan, Korea and Russia are trying to 
 proliferate nuclear power plants and export them to other countries. When a 
 nuclear accident occurs in Japan, the radiation fallout will reach the 
 United States in eight hours, and the radiation in the water will reach the 
 U.S. in about three years. Right now Japan is using the Pacific Ocean as a 
 “giant radioactive sewer.” There’s no way to measure the radioactive 
 debris in Fukushima, some 300 tons [daily], which leaks into the Pacific 
 Ocean through groundwater.\n\nReport from Fukushima and the Abe government 
 expansion and export of nuclear plants" Partial 
 Transcript\nhttps://japansafety.wordpress.com/2015/02/06/report-from-fukushima-and-the-abe-government-expansion-and-export-of-nuclear-plants/\nFEBRUARY 
 6, 2015 BY MELANIE\n\nThe Nuclear Free California Network hosted this 
 conference on Jan. 24 and 25, 2015, in San Luis Obispo near the Diablo 
 Canyon.\n\n[Note: All text in quotations is directly quoted from the 
 speakers’ translator, Carole Hisasue, who represents Mothers For Peace, 
 and all other text is a paraphrased version of Hisasue’s 
 translation.]\n\nThe first speaker, Chieko Shiina from Fukushima and a 
 supporter of the Fukushima Collaborative Clinic, says that radiation 
 “doesn’t discriminate between organisms. It destroys everything.” In 
 Futaba City after the March 2011 triple meltdown, a company that raised 
 ostriches for slaughter released its ostriches into the streets, exposing 
 them to radiation. People were evacuated, but all animals – cows, dogs, 
 cats and pets – remained in highly contaminated areas. Shiina gave three 
 examples of things that are happening in Fukushima.\n\n(1) Already 85 
 children have had surgeries for thyroid cancer. One hundred and thirteen 
 children are suspected of having cancer. These startling figures are a 
 reality despite the fact that the Professor Yamashita Shunichi, former 
 president of the exploratory committee for Fukushima Prefectural People’s 
 Health Management Survey, said a child has a one in a million chance of 
 getting cancer from exposure to radiation from Fukushima. In reality, that 
 probability is one is 3,000 – an epidemic. Mr. Sugami, head of the 
 National Cancer Research Center, estimated that cancer rates in Fukushima 
 have risen 61 times. And still, the central and Fukushima prefectural 
 governments claim that these rates are not a result of radiation exposure. 
 “How long does the government think that we’ll be silent about this, in 
 light of this epidemic? My anger will never die down. And then to think of 
 the parents of the small children, how worried they must be. That’s one 
 of the reasons why I set up this collaborative clinic in Fukushima. It’s 
 operated solely by donations from people and is completely independent of 
 the government.” The Fukushima adults are also experiencing health 
 problems from radiation exposure – increased rates of thyroid cancer, 
 heart attacks, leukemia, cataracts and many other health problems. It’s 
 up to us to gather and disseminate this information.\n\n(2) The Japanese 
 government has opened a road that runs about nine miles from Fukushima 
 Daiichi. It is considered open but “not for use.” They say that when 
 you do use this road, you must have all the windows rolled up, you can’t 
 use the air conditioning, and there’s no parking allowed on the road. 
 “And of course, no pedestrians, motorbikes or bicycles are allowed.” So 
 why did they even open it? It was just a front to allow the government to 
 continue justifying its agenda: Radiation doesn’t affect Fukushima; It is 
 safe to hold the Olympics in Japan; Restarting other nuclear plants and 
 going to war is fine. “I cannot forgive the government. They are 
 murderers. This is definitely a holocaust.”\n\n(3) “I’m sure you all 
 know about the temporary housing, where the evacuees have had to go and 
 have been there for many years now.” The temporary housing is made up of 
 flimsy shacks separated by plywood. “These are the people that are from 
 the rural areas of Japan. They had lots of land. They were used to living 
 out in the open with tons and tons of space. Now they’ve been living in 
 these cramped quarters separated by flimsy plywood for four years now. They 
 can’t go home. There’s nowhere to go. The radiation is too high. They 
 used to be getting compensation from the government, but that’s been 
 stopped. They used to be getting a transportation allowance, but that’s 
 been stopped too. Now they’re just forgotten people completely cut 
 off.” These people are suffering from psychological damage too, like 
 insomnia. There are also higher rates of suicide. “These are related 
 deaths but not directly related. The government will never seen them as 
 being a direct effect of the radiation. So that’s the reality of a 
 nuclear radiation war because you can’t see the radiation, and there’s 
 no data going around. The media won’t report on it. Everything is just 
 being swept under the rug.”\n\nThere are other effects to children’s 
 health. They cannot play outside in sandboxes anymore. The government’s 
 solution was to built indoor sandboxes – a glass pen with sand brought in 
 from a different prefecture. We think it’s best to temporarily evacuate 
 the children to allow them to play outdoors, rest, relax and regain 
 strength in uncontaminated prefectures. But the government is promoting the 
 return of Fukushima evacuees to their hometowns, claiming that it is now 
 safe. As a result of the way the government has been handling the 
 situation, the people can’t even talk about their fears of radiation. 
 They want to take their children out of those areas for the weekend so they 
 can play outdoors, but they don’t talk about it with their neighbors, 
 making up excuses why they are taking short vacations. Speaking about 
 radiation exposure has become taboo. “It’s also divided families, for 
 example, families that are still running farms. The grandparents think that 
 the vegetables they are growing are safe, even growing them organically, 
 and they want their grandchildren to eat the vegetables. But the mother 
 thinks, ‘Oh no. I cannot possibly give these vegetables to my 
 children.’ And she will throw them away, but she cannot even talk about 
 that to her own parents.”\n\nLast March 11, a Japanese news station 
 called “Hodo Station,” aired a program on Fukushima. The director 
 promised to make a follow-up show, telling an interviewee that they would 
 be airing it soon. Instead, the program was never aired, and the director 
 died. The director told one of the interviewees, a mother, that if she 
 hears of his death, she should not believe that it was a suicide, no matter 
 what others are saying. “There is no truth in the media in Japan today. 
 There are all sorts of these mysterious events happening that are still 
 unexplained and not investigated.” According to the Japanese 
 government’s new Secrecy Act, any anti-government activities are 
 prohibited, such as a gathering like this. You cannot voice an 
 anti-government opinion. Soon the government will be stopping more and more 
 meetings like this. The damage caused by the nuclear accident was not just 
 radiation exposure. “There have been damage to our liberties, damage to 
 our future for a peaceful Japan, and I want to let you know that I am so 
 glad to be connected with you and to be able to speak with you today. I 
 believe that nuclear power is just another form of nuclear war and nuclear 
 weapons. And this is a struggle between the one percent and the 99 percent, 
 in which everything is done for the profits of the one percent, and the 99 
 percent are just not important enough. So I believe that when the 99 
 percent can get together and gain strength, then we have hope for the 
 future. Our lives are for ourselves. It’s not for the one percent. We 
 should not stand for it. Let’s fight together.”\n\nShiina continues her 
 speech at 39:45 minutes. She explains the growing success of the Fukushima 
 Collaborative Clinic, which has volunteer doctors who test the thyroids of 
 children and adults, including Fukushima Daiichi workers, and is solely 
 funded by donations. By supporting the clinic’s efforts, she feels that 
 she is at war with the Japanese government, which hides the realities of 
 the Fukushima disaster in order to support its pro-nuclear policy. Despite 
 the government’s claim that nuclear power is now safe due to new safety 
 measures and precautions, Shiina questions this logic by the sheer fact 
 that many nuclear power plants in Japan sit on fault lines, and the 
 government has been distributing potassium iodide to populations living 
 near nuclear plants (just in case). She also questions the new safety 
 measures. For example, the government wants to restart a power plant in 
 Hokkaido, the northern-most island of Japan that has a long winter. 
 Evacuation drills have been conducted in the summertime, but citizens 
 question why they shouldn’t be prepared in the event of a nuclear 
 disaster during the winter.\n\nShiina advocates for labor unions and worker 
 strikes with citizen support in order to prevent new nuclear power plants 
 to be built and old plants to be restarted. There is a railway that runs 
 close to Fukushima Daiichi, the Joban line. In its effort to revive 
 Fukushima’s economy, the government tried to reopen the line, which is 
 completely contaminated, inside and out. The Doro Mito railway workers 
 refused to work on the line because they didn’t want to work in highly 
 radioactive conditions, and they didn’t want passengers to be exposed to 
 those conditions. “I believe that if the citizens and the workers all 
 join together and work together as one, anything is possible.”\n\n* * 
 *\n\nThe second speaker is Chizu Hamada from No Nukes Action. [Her speech 
 begins 33 minutes in.] Hamada explains that only the elderly evacuees from 
 Fukushima Prefecture want to return to their homes. The young people, 
 especially mothers, do not want to return. However, the Japanese government 
 says certain areas are safe to live in and threaten the evacuees to move 
 back by cutting off their compensation one year after their evacuation zone 
 has been lifted, i.e. deemed safe to inhabit. The government simply 
 doesn’t want to continue paying compensation.\n\nSecondly, there have 
 been many mysterious deaths related to radiation exposure that the local 
 government has not recognized. The government counts 1,758 deaths related 
 to Fukushima radiation, but there are actually many more. This 
 misinformation is related to the new Secrecy Act, which makes exposing such 
 information punishable.\n\nThirdly, Japan’s nuclear front has two good 
 pieces of news. Last year, Kansai Electric Power Co. lost its suit in 
 trying to restart to reactors at the Oi Nuclear Power Plant in Fukui. The 
 verdict stated, “Human lives are above the profit of industries.” 
 Contributing to this verdict was a lawsuit brought against an electric 
 company by the husband of a Korean cancer victim, claiming that radiation 
 from a nuclear power plant caused his wife’s cancer. This is one of the 
 few instances in Japan were there is an accepted causal relationship 
 between radiation exposure from a nuclear power plant and cancer.\n\n* * 
 *\n\nThe third speaker is Isamu “Sam” Kanno of No Nukes Asian Action, 
 an anti-nuclear organization that brought a class action lawsuit, with 
 3,853 plaintiffs from 39 countries, against GE, Hitachi and Toshiba for 
 damages resulting from the Fukushima disaster. No Nukes Asian Action has 
 gathered 1,290 plaintiffs from Japan, 138 from the United States, 1,000 
 from Korea and 600 from Taiwan, along other countries such as Germany and 
 Mongolia. “Basically this is an action against the fact that the 
 manufacturers of the nuclear reactors are exempt, by law (the 
 Price-Anderson law, 1957, an amendment to the Atomic Energy Act), from any 
 liability. … ”\n\n” … Eisenhower made the Atoms For Peace speech in 
 1953, and it was strange because in 1945, two Japanese cities were 
 destroyed by nuclear weapons. We see [Atoms For Peace] as a way to justify 
 holding on to nuclear weapons and nuclear materials. Already the UK and the 
 Soviets had nuclear power since 1955. In the 60 years since then, many 
 countries have gotten nuclear power. What have we gotten from it? Just some 
 steam generation.” The United States persuaded Japan to build nuclear 
 reactors in a country riddled with earthquake faults, but this wasn’t for 
 nuclear power; it was for the potential of nuclear weapons production. In 
 2012, the United States supported the restart of the Oi nuclear reactors. 
 “There is a slogan going around in Japan saying that nuclear power plants 
 are a nuclear weapon aimed at ourselves. …” The United States has not 
 been creating new nuclear power plants for a long time, but the problem in 
 Asia is that countries like Japan, Korea and Russia are trying to 
 proliferate nuclear power plants and export them to other countries. When a 
 nuclear accident occurs in Japan, the radiation fallout will reach the 
 United States in eight hours, and the radiation in the water will reach the 
 U.S. in about three years. Right now Japan is using the Pacific Ocean as a 
 “giant radioactive sewer.” There’s no way to measure the radioactive 
 debris in Fukushima, some 300 tons [daily], which leaks into the Pacific 
 Ocean through groundwater.\n\nReport From Fukushima And The Abe Government 
 Expansion And Export Of Nuclear 
 Plants\nhttp://youtu.be/10weYriSSP8\nReports were made on the continuing 
 contamination in Fukushima Japan and the role of the Abe 
 government.\nChieko Shiina from Fukushima and a supporter of the Fukushima 
 Collaborative Clinic, Isamu “Sam” Kanno of No Nukes Asia and Chizu 
 Hamada of No Nukes Action spoke at the meeting. The presentations were 
 translated by Carole Hisasue who is with Mothers For Peace.\nThis 
 conference took place  in San Louis Obispo near the Diablo Canyon nuclear 
 plant. It was  called by the Nuclear Free California Network. and was held 
 on January 24 & 25th, 2015\nFor more information \nOn Fukushima 
 Collaborative Clinic\nhttp://www.clinic-fukushima.jp/english/\nNo Nukes 
 Action Committee\nhttp://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/\nNo Nukes 
 Asia\nhttp://www18.ocn.ne.jp/~nnaf/index-e.htm\nNuclear Free 
 California\nwww.nuclearfreecal.org\nProduction of Labor Video Project 
 www.laborvideo.org\n\nJapan Diet Member Taro Yamamoto On Fukushima, War, 
 Privatization & 
 TPP\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bySXUAXt5hE&feature=\nJapanese 
 independent Diet member Taro Yamamoto was elected as an opposition 
 candidate to nuclear power and against the reopening of Japan's more than 
 40 plants. He became politically active in Japan after the Fukushima TEPCO 
 nuclear plant meltdowns.  In this interview he compares the Fukushima to 
 the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombing. He also discuss the rise of 
 militarization, the building of a US base in Okinawa and why the Japanese 
 people are against the Trans Pacific Partnership TPP agreement along with  
 the dangers of privatization. This interview was done 
 11/20/2014.\nProduction of Labor Video Project www.laborvideo.org\nFor more 
 information\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tnpkBgQgtzY\nProduction of 
 Labor Video Project www.laborvideo.org\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/03/03/18769471.php
SUMMARY:3/11 All Out On 4th Anniversary of Fukushima Meltdowns
LOCATION:275 Battery St/California St.\nSan Francisco\nMarch to PG&E 245 Market St. 
 SF to demand the closure of Diablo Canyon Nuclear Plant
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/03/03/18769471.php
DTSTART:20150311T220000Z
DTEND:20150312T000000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
