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DESCRIPTION:11/20 Berkeley Screening Five Years After Fukushima Living With 
 Disaster\nReport on Okinawa and The Struggle Against US Military 
 Bases\nReport By Steve Zeltzer\nNNA and KPFA WorkWeek Radio\n\nSunday 
 November 20, 2016 2:30 PM\nBerkeley Main Library\nCommunity Room 3rd 
 Floor\n2090 Kittredge St. Berkeley\n\nJoin No Nukes Action as we screen the 
 film Fukushima Living With Disaster. This excellently produced film looks 
 at the present situation in Fukushima five years after the meltdowns and 
 explosions that spewed radioactive material in Japan and throughout the 
 world. There are tens of thousands of bags of radioactive waste with no 
 place to go and the children and families are being told that they must 
 return to Fukushima because it has been "decontaminated" and also the 
 Japanese Abe government is saying the radiation can be "overcome". They 
 also lied to the Olympic committee that the problem was solved in Fukushima 
 despite the continued release of contaminated water into the Pacifica 
 ocean.\nThis meeting will also hear a report on the struggle in Okinawa 
 against US military bases which will contain nuclear weapons. The US and 
 Japanese government are seeking to remilitarize Japan and this increases 
 the danger of war in Asia.\n\nNo Nukes Action organizes against nuclear 
 power in Japan and around the world. It has a monthly speak out and rally 
 every 11th of the month at the Japanese consulate at 3 PM at 275 Battery 
 St. near California St. in San Francisco.\n\nSponsored by\nNo Nukes 
 Action\nhttp://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/\n\nFukushima Flunks 
 Decontamination\nhttp://www.counterpunch.org/2016/05/20/fukushima-flunks-decontamination/\nMAY 
 20, 2016\nFukushima Flunks Decontamination\nby ROBERT 
 HUNZIKER\n\n\n\n\nJapan’s Abe administration is pushing very hard to 
 decontaminate land, roads, and buildings throughout Fukushima Prefecture, 
 105 cities, towns, and villages. Thousands of workers collect toxic 
 material into enormous black one-ton bags, thereby accumulating gigantic 
 geometric structures of bags throughout the landscape, looking evermore 
 like the foreground of iconic ancient temples.\n\nHere’s the big push: PM 
 Abe committed to the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, which shall be a crowning 
 achievement in the face of the Fukushima disaster. Hence, all stops are 
 pulled to repopulate Fukushima Prefecture, especially with Olympic events 
 held within Fukushima, where foodstuff will originate for Olympic 
 attendees.\n\nThe Abe government is desperately trying to clean up and 
 repopulate as if nothing happened, whereas Chernobyl (1986) determined at 
 the outset it was an impossible task, a lost cause, declaring a 1,000 
 square mile no-habitation zone, resettling 350,000 people. It’ll take 
 centuries for the land to return to normal.\n\nStill and all, is it really 
 truly possible to cleanse the Fukushima countryside?\n\nAlready, workers 
 have accumulated enough one-ton black bags filled with irradiated soil and 
 debris to stretch from Tokyo to LA. But, that only accounts for about 
 one-half of the job yet to be done. Still, in the face of this commendable 
 herculean effort, analysis of decontamination reveals serious missteps and 
 problems.\n\nEven though the Abe government is encouraging evacuees to move 
 back into villages, towns, and cities of Fukushima Prefecture, Greenpeace 
 nuclear campaigner Heinz Smital claims, in a video – Fukushima: Living 
 with Disaster d/d March 2016: “Radiation is so high here that nobody will 
 be able to live here in the coming years.”\n\nGreenpeace has experts on 
 the ground in Fukushima Prefecture March 2016, testing radiation levels. 
 The numbers do not look good at all. Still, at the insistence of the Abe 
 government, people are moving back into partially contaminated areas. In 
 such a case, and assuming Greenpeace is straightforward, it’s a fair 
 statement that if the Abe government can’t do a better job, then 
 something or somebody needs to change. The Olympics are coming.\n\nThe 
 Greenpeace report of March 4, 2016: Radiation Reloaded – Impacts of the 
 Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Accident 5 Years Later, exposes deeply flawed 
 assumptions by the IAEA and the Abe government in terms of both 
 decontamination and ecosystem risks.\n\nEver since March 2011, for over 5 
 years now, Greenpeace has conducted 25 radiological investigations in 
 Fukushima Prefecture, concluding that five years after the Fukushima 
 nuclear accident, it remains clear that the environmental consequences are 
 complex and extensive and hazardous.\n\nA 17-minute video entitled 
 “Fukushima: Living with Disaster,” shows Greenpeace specialists in real 
 time, conducting radiation tests in decontaminated villages and towns of 
 the prefecture. Viewers can see actual real time measurements of radiation 
 on dosimeters.\n\n\n\nFor example, in the Village of Iitate, 40 kilometers 
 northwest of the Daiichi nuclear plant, Toru Anzai, an evacuee of Iitate, 
 is told decontamination work on his plot of land nearly complete, and he is 
 to rehabitate in 2017. However, Toru has personal doubts about governmental 
 claims. As it happens, Greenpeace tests show abnormally high levels of 
 radiation where decontamination work is already complete.\n\n“Here we 
 have around 0.8 microsieverts (μSv) per hour,” Heinz Smital, nuclear 
 campaigner Greenpeace, “0.23 was the government target for 
 decontamination work.” An adjoining space registers 1.5-2.0 μSv 
 sometimes up to 3.5 μSv. “This is not the kind of count where you can 
 say things are back to normal.”\n\nThroughout the prefecture, 
 decontamination is only partially carried out. For example, decontamination 
 is confined within a 20-meter radius of private plots and along the roads 
 as well as on farmland, leaving vast swaths of hills, valleys, riverbanks, 
 streams, forests, and mountains untouched. Over time, radiation 
 contamination runoff will re-contaminate many previously decontaminated 
 areas.\n\nAlarmingly, Greenpeace found large caches of hidden buried toxic 
 black bags. Over time, it is likely the bags will rot away with 
 radioactivity seeping into groundwater.\n\nAt Fukushima City, 60 km from 
 the plant, Greenpeace discovered unacceptable radiation levels with spot 
 readings as high as 4.26, 1.85, 9.06 μSv. According to Greenpeace: 
 “These radiation levels are anything but harmless.”\n\nThe government 
 officially informed Miyoko Watanable, an evacuee of Miyakochi, of 
 “radiation eradicated” from her home. But, she says, “I don’t plan 
 to live here again.” Greenpeace confirmed her instincts: “Although work 
 has only recently finished here, we find counts of 1-to-2 μSv per hour… 
 That’s not a satisfactory for the people here in this contaminated 
 area” (Heinz Smital).\n\nOnce an area is officially declared 
 “decontaminated,” disaster relief payments for citizens like Miyoko 
 Watanable stop. The government is off the hook.\n\nWithout a doubt, the 
 government of Japan is confronted with an extraordinarily difficult 
 challenge, and it may seem unbecoming to ridicule or find fault with the 
 Abe administration in the face of such unprecedented circumstances. But, 
 the issue is much bigger than the weird antics of the Abe government, which 
 passed an absolutely insane secrecy law providing for 10 years in prison to 
 anybody who breathes a secret, undefined.\n\nRather, whether nuclear power 
 is truly safe is a worldwide issue. In that regard, the nuclear industry 
 has an unfair PR advantage because of the latency effect of radiation. In 
 general, the latency period for cancers is 5-6 years before statistically 
 discernible numbers. People forget.\n\nConsequently, it is important to 
 reflect on key facts:\n\nIn a 2014 RT interview, Katsutaka Idogawa, former 
 mayor of Futaba in Fukushima Prefecture, said: “It’s a real shame that 
 the authorities hide the truth from the whole world, from the UN. We need 
 to admit that actually many people are dying. We are not allowed to say 
 that, but TEPCO employees also are dying. But they keep mum about 
 it.”\n\nAlas, two hundred fifty U.S. sailors of the USS Ronald Reagan, on 
 a Fukushima humanitarian rescue mission, have a pending lawsuit against 
 TEPCO, et al claiming they are already experiencing leukemia, ulcers, gall 
 bladder removals, brain cancer, brain tumors, testicular cancer, 
 dysfunctional uterine bleeding, thyroid illness, stomach ailments and other 
 complaints extremely unusual in such young adults. Allegedly, the sailors 
 were led to believe radiation exposure was not a problem.\n\nTheodore 
 Holcomb (38), an aviation mechanic, died from radiation complications, and 
 according to Charles Bonner, attorney for the sailors, at least three 
 sailors have now died from mysterious illnesses (Third US Navy Sailor Dies 
 After Being Exposed to Fukushima Radiation, Natural News, August 24, 2015.) 
 Among the plaintiffs is a sailor who was pregnant during the mission. Her 
 baby was born with multiple genetic mutations.\n\nReflecting on 30 years 
 ago, Adi Roche, chief executive of Chernobyl Children International, care 
 for 25,000 children so far, says (2014): “The impact of Chernobyl is 
 still very real and very present to the children who must live in an 
 environment poisoned with radioactivity.”\n\n“Children rocking back and 
 forth for hours on end, hitting their heads against walls, grinding their 
 teeth, scraping their faces and putting their hands down their throats… 
 This is what I witnessed when I volunteered at Vesnova Children’s Mental 
 Asylum in Belarus (February 2014),” How my Trip to a Children’s Mental 
 Asylum in Belarus Made me Proud to be Irish, the journal.ie. March 18, 2014 
 (Cliodhna Russell). Belarus has over 300 institutions like this hidden deep 
 in the backwoods.\n\nChernobyl is filled with tear-jerking, heart-wrenching 
 stories of deformed, crippled, misshaped, and countless dead because of 
 radiation sickness. It’s enough to turn one’s stomach in the face of 
 any and all apologists for nuclear power.\n\nAccording to Naoto Kan, 
 Japanese PM 2010-11 during the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant 
 meltdown: “For the good of humanity it is absolutely necessary to shut 
 down all nuclear power plants. That is my firm belief” (source: 
 Greenpeace video, March 2016).\n\nOver 60 nuclear reactors are currently 
 under construction in 15 countries. China has 400 nuclear power plants on 
 the drawing boards. Russia plans mini-nuclear floating power plants to 
 power oil drill rigs in the Arctic by 2020. Honestly!\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2016/11/14/18793584.php
SUMMARY:Berkeley Screening Five Years After Fukushima Living With Disaster & Okinawa Report
LOCATION:Berkeley Main Library\nCommunity Room 3rd Floor\n2090 Kittredge St. 
 Berkeley
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2016/11/14/18793584.php
DTSTART:20161120T223000Z
DTEND:20161121T003000Z
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