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CREATED:20170108T023300Z
DESCRIPTION:1/11 SF Japan Consulate Speak-Out Stop Restarting Japan's Nuclear Reactors 
 Evacuate Children and Families From Fukushima\nWednesday January 11, 2017 
 3:00 PM\nSan Francisco Japanese Consulate\n275 Battery St./California 
 St.\nSan Francisco\n\nOn Wednesday January 11, 2017, there will be a speak 
 out against the restarting of more than 40 of Japan's nuclear power plants. 
 The government has told the residents of Fukushima that it is safe but 
 independent surveys show that it is still highly contaminated. Over 175 
 children have already been diagnosed with thyroid cancer and this is 
 expanding. While the government is subsidizing Tokyo Electric Power Company 
 which has had to be nationalized the Abe government is telling families and 
 children that they have to return to Fukushima or their subsidy will be 
 cut. The are economically pressuring the refugees to return to a dangerous 
 contaminated area in order to pretend that they have "decontaminated" 
 Fukushima. Even former prime ministers Koizumi and Kan are against 
 restarting the nuclear power plants but the government is pushing 
 ahead.\nRailroad workers who area with  rank and file rail unions Doro-Mito 
 (National Railway Motive Power Union of Mito) and Doro-Chiba (National 
 Railway Motive Power Union of Chiba)  are also protesting the plans to 
 re-open the rail lines even with the contamination and there have been 
 strikes and protests against this policy.\nThey also have passed a "secrecy 
 law" that is being used to intimidate and silence reporters and citizens 
 from speaking out and investigating the growing and continuing Fukushima 
 disaster. The cost is monumental yet they are taking action that will lead 
 to another Fukushima with Japan being located on the "ring of fire" where 
 massive earthquakes are certain to hit again.\nThe Abe government also told 
 the International Olympic Committee and the people of the world that the 
 Fukushima "problem" had been solved. This flagrant and blatant  
 falsification has been exposed again and again following the declaration 
 from the Abe government including the continuing massive costs of 
 supposedly "cleaning up" the catastrophe.\nThe Abe government is   also 
 preparing a "conspiracy bill" that will be used to silence all those who 
 even opposed nuclear power. The people of the United States need to stand 
 with the people of Japan in their efforts to keep the plants shut down and 
 the protection of families and children in Fukushima.\n\nSpeak Out and 
 Rally initiated by\nNo Nukes Action 
 Committee\nhttp://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/\n\nThyroid cancer 
 compensation for Japan Fukushima plant 
 worker\nhttp://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/AJ201612170027.html\nBy YURI 
 OIWA/ Staff Writer\nDecember 17, 2016 at 15:10 JST\n\nA man who developed 
 thyroid gland cancer after working at the stricken Fukushima No. 1 nuclear 
 plant has for the first time won the right to work-related 
 compensation.\n\nWhile the case ranks as the third time a worker at the 
 Fukushima plant has been recognized as eligible for work-related 
 compensation because of cancer caused by radiation exposure, it is the 
 first instance involving thyroid gland cancer.\n\nThe Ministry of Health, 
 Labor and Welfare announced its decision Dec. 16.\n\nThe man in his 40s, an 
 employee of plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co., worked at the 
 Fukushima plant after the triple meltdown triggered by the 2011 Great East 
 Japan Earthquake and tsunami. He was diagnosed with thyroid gland cancer in 
 April 2014.\n\nThe man worked at various nuclear plants, including the 
 Fukushima facility, between 1992 and 2012. He was mainly involved in 
 operating and overseeing reactor operations.\n\nAfter the March 2011 
 nuclear accident, the man was in the plant complex when hydrogen explosions 
 rocked the No. 1 and No. 3 reactor buildings. His duties included 
 confirming water and pressure meter levels as well as providing fuel to 
 water pumps.\n\nThe amount of his accumulated whole body radiation exposure 
 was 150 millisieverts, with about 140 millisieverts resulting from the 
 period after the nuclear accident. Of that amount, about 40 millisieverts 
 was through internal exposure caused by inhaling or other ways of absorbing 
 radioactive materials.\n\nAlong with recognizing the first work-related 
 compensation involving thyroid gland cancer, the labor ministry also 
 released for the first time its overall position on dealing with 
 compensation issues for workers who were at the Fukushima plant after the 
 accident.\n\nThe ministry said it would recognize compensation for workers 
 whose accumulated whole body dose exceeded 100 millisieverts and for whom 
 at least five years have passed since the start of work involving radiation 
 exposure and the diagnosis of cancer.\n\nMinistry officials said the dose 
 level was not a strict standard but one yardstick for recognizing 
 compensation.\n\nAccording to a study by TEPCO and a U.N. scientific 
 committee looking into the effects of radiation, 174 people who worked at 
 the plant had accumulated whole body doses exceeding 100 millisieverts as 
 of this past March.\n\nThere is also an estimate that more than 2,000 
 workers have radiation doses exceeding 100 millisieverts just in their 
 thyroid gland.\n\nLabor Groups Protest Reopening of Rail Lines Near 
 Fukushima\nhttp://www.counterpunch.org/2016/12/15/labor-groups-protest-reopening-of-rail-lines-near-fukushima/\nDECEMBER 
 15, 2016\nLabor Groups Protest Reopening of Rail Lines Near Fukushima\nby 
 WILLIAM ANDREWS\n\nTokyo.\n\nLabor activists have protested the reopening 
 this month of a railway line in parts of northeast Japan where they believe 
 radiation levels are still dangerous.\n\nThe Joban Line runs from Nippori 
 Station in Tokyo to Iwanuma Station, just south of Sendai City. It is one 
 of main connections between northeast Tokyo’s major station of Ueno up 
 along the coast through Chiba, Ibaraki and Miyagi prefectures.\n\nThis 
 region was severely damaged by the earthquake and tsunami on March 11th, 
 2011, while the subsequent Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant disaster 
 meant that large areas through which trains pass were contaminated by 
 radiation.\n\nThe Joban Line was directly hit by the massive tsunami wave 
 in 2011, sweeping train carriages away. Though parts of the line were 
 quickly reopened that same year, two sections of the line—between Tatsuta 
 and Odaka stations, and between Soma and Hamayoshida—remained closed, 
 with passengers served by buses for some of the stations.\n\nHowever, the 
 operator, East Japan Railway Company (JR East), and the Ministry of Land, 
 Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, have been keen to reopen the whole 
 line as part of the northeast Japan reconstruction efforts. The Joban Line 
 represents a valuable source of income from both passengers traveling 
 between Sendai and Tokyo as well as freight.\n\nFollowing decontamination 
 measures, rail services resumed from Iwaki to Tatsuta in late 2014. 
 However, north of Tatsuta lies the areas located within a 20km radius of 
 the devastated Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, which is widely 
 considered a no-go zone.\n\nIn July this year, JR East resumed services on 
 the 9.4-kilometer stretch between Odaka and Haranomachi stations as the 
 evacuation order was lifted for the southern part of Minamisoma City, 
 though few residents are willing to return to a community so close to the 
 contaminated area. Media reports suggest only 10-20% are coming back to 
 live in the area.\n\nOn December 10th, the previously closed 23.2-kilometer 
 northern section of line between Soma and Hamayoshida reopened for rail 
 services. It means passengers will now be served by a further six stations 
 on the section, though three of these (Shinchi, Yamashita and Sakamoto 
 stations) had to be relocated inland by up to 1.1 kilometers as an 
 anti-tsunami measure. Along with the construction of elevated tracks, the 
 total cost of the latest reopening is said to be 40 billion yen ($350 
 million).\n\nBy spring 2017, the line will be reopened between Namie and 
 Odaka, and then later in the year between Tatsuta and Tomioka. The final 
 section linking Tomioka and Namie, passing through somewhat infamous areas 
 like Futaba, is set to reopen by the end of fiscal 2019 (end of March 
 2020).\n\nLocal tourist bodies are naturally delighted and are pulling out 
 all the stops to attract people. At the newly reopened stations, passengers 
 are able to buy commemorative tickets, take hiking trips, and even try on 
 historical armor.\n\nLingering Doubts over Radiation\n\nOfficial 
 announcements say that radiation levels have fallen and clean-up efforts 
 will remove any health risk. Last August, JR East began decontamination 
 tests on parts of the railway between Yonomori and Futaba stations where 
 the radioactivity remains high. It has reported that falling radiation 
 levels can be confirmed at six inspection points along the line, making it 
 confident that decontamination measures are working.\n\nHowever, the legacy 
 of the Fukushima disaster is a lingering distrust for government and 
 corporate claims about radiation. Activists allege that authorities and JR 
 East are putting profits and the appearance of safety over the genuine 
 health of rail workers and passengers. Just as with the gradual lifting of 
 restrictions on entering the areas around the Joban Line, reopening the 
 railway is, they say, an attempt to encourage evacuated residents to return 
 and tourists to visit even though health risks may remain.\n\nThis pressure 
 to reconstruct the region quickly and maintain an impression of safety to 
 Japan and the rest of the world comes from the very top, as demonstrated by 
 the Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s now notorious claim that the Fukushima 
 disaster was “under control” in his speech in September 2013 during the 
 final (and successful) Tokyo bid to win the 2020 Olympic Games. Abe also 
 officiated at the opening of the rebuilt Shinchi Station on December 
 10th.\n\nProtests Against Reopening\n\nThe rank and file rail unions 
 Doro-Mito (National Railway Motive Power Union of Mito) and Doro-Chiba 
 (National Railway Motive Power Union of Chiba) have long protested the 
 ambitions of JR East as part of their campaigns against the operator’s 
 growing policies of rationalization and outsourcing.\n\nOn December 10th, 
 around 50 activists from Doro-Mito and associated groups opposed the Joban 
 Line reopening by demonstrating at the Sendai branch of JR East in the 
 morning. A small number of train drivers from the union also went on strike 
 that day. This was coordinated with other protests and actions in Fukushima 
 City and Tokyo at JR sites. At an afternoon protest outside the JR East 
 headquarters in Shinjuku, central Tokyo, around 150 unionists 
 demonstrated.\n\nThese are just the most recent examples of actions by this 
 network of medium-sized yet feisty unions, which have waged several strikes 
 and protests since JR East began reopening parts of the track following the 
 2011 disaster. Unionists have fought to block the reopening in order to 
 protect the well-being of workers as well as the general public.\n\nOther 
 unions and labor groups have apparently remained silent on the Joban Line 
 issue, as have the major anti-nuclear power protest organisations. The 
 mainstream media has also given the Joban Line protests almost no coverage, 
 though the reopening itself was extensively celebrated.\n\nDoro-Mito and 
 Doro-Chiba are the largest groups in a network of militant unions called 
 Doro-Soren, affiliated with the Japan Revolutionary Communist League. Other 
 smaller unions have been established in Tokyo, Fukushima, Niigata and 
 elsewhere. While the overall numbers of unionized workers remain only in 
 the hundreds, organizers hope to create a national union in the 
 future.\n\nThe unions have held small strikes on the Joban Line issue 
 alongside their regular strikes and protests against labor conditions, as 
 well as participating in general rallies against the restarting of nuclear 
 power plants in Japan. In this way, the issues of neoliberalism and nuclear 
 power have become aligned in a new and invigorating way.\n\nThe Doro-Soren 
 network is also associated with NAZEN, which was formed in August 2011 as a 
 youth group to fight the nuclear industry. The various groups have taken 
 part in annual protests at Fukushima on the anniversary of the earthquake 
 and tsunami, regularly mobilizing over 1,000 demonstrators.\n\nContinuing 
 Anti-nuclear Power Movement\n\nThough it peaked in 2012, the anti-nuclear 
 power movement continues in Japan, fighting against attempts to put the 
 reactors back into operation. There are still weekly vigils every Friday 
 night outside the prime minister’s official residence as well as intense 
 protests where the reactors are located.\n\nUntil the Fukushima disaster, 
 the anti-nuclear power movement had been largely localized to certain areas 
 around Japan where facilities were located. It was not widely supported by 
 either far-left groups or mainstream parliamentary leftist parties like the 
 JCP until after the Fukushima disaster. Today it is a diverse movement of 
 political parties, labor unions, small civic groups, individual activists, 
 and regular citizens.\n\nThe Liberal Democratic Party, led by Shinzo Abe, 
 returned to power at the end of 2012, and reversed the Democratic Party of 
 Japan’s pledge to phase out nuclear power in the future. Abe’s 
 government has instead pushed to restart reactors and even export nuclear 
 technology to other nations such as Vietnam.\n\nAs such, the Joban Line 
 protests represent a notable intersection of the labor movement with the 
 anti-nuclear movement in Japan as well as anti-Abe protest movement. The 
 former has a strong association with the railways and was heavily weakened 
 by the privatization of the National Railways in the 1980s, which resulted 
 in the group of JR operators that exists today.\n\nIn the run-up to the 
 2020 Olympics in Tokyo, the post-disaster reconstruction efforts will 
 accelerate, driven by the national and regional governments as well as JR 
 East and other corporations. However, vigilant activists will also continue 
 to protest any attempt to sweep the ongoing Fukushima crisis and the 
 nuclear issue under the rug.\n\nWilliam Andrews is a writer and translator 
 in Tokyo, and the author of Dissenting Japan: A History of Japanese 
 Radicalism and Counterculture, from 1945 to Fukushima.\n\nJoin the debate 
 on Facebook \nWilliam Andrews is a writer and translator in Tokyo, and the 
 author of Dissenting Japan: A History of Japanese Radicalism and 
 Counterculture, from 1945 to Fukushima.\n\nGovernment to help fund 
 Fukushima decontamination, easing Tepco’s 
 burden\nhttp://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2016/12/20/national/government-help-fund-fukushima-decontamination-easing-tepcos-burden/#.WFln8BSAW-Q\nKYODO\nDEC 
 20, 2016\nThe Cabinet decided Tuesday that the central government will help 
 pay to decontaminate areas worst hit by the 2011 Fukushima reactor 
 meltdowns, marking a shift from earlier rules requiring Tepco to foot the 
 bill.\n\nPrime Minister Shinzo Abe’s team endorsed a plan to set up a 
 reconstruction hub in the most contaminated, off-limits areas in Fukushima 
 Prefecture and secure about ¥30 billion for decontamination work in the 
 fiscal 2017 budget.\n\nThe cost of the work could total around ¥300 
 billion in the next five years and grow further depending on how it 
 progresses.\n\nThe plan is in line with proposals made in August by the 
 ruling coalition, but no government panel review or Diet deliberations have 
 been held on it, raising the prospect that it could be criticized as a 
 bailout for Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings Inc.\n\nThe government 
 decided to add the decontamination work, including soil and tree removal, 
 to infrastructure projects for making the affected land habitable again, 
 but the special law on decontamination states that Tepco should shoulder 
 the expenses.\n\nThe government will have to revise the special law on 
 rebuilding Fukushima to accommodate the shift.\n\nThe move to help pay for 
 the decontamination came after the expected price tag surged to ¥4 
 trillion from the previous estimate of ¥2.5 trillion, which did not 
 include the cost of cleaning the areas with the highest levels of 
 radiation.\n\nIf the government-funded cleaning area expands, the use of 
 taxpayer money is likely to balloon to several trillion yen.\n\nMeanwhile, 
 in an effort to turn Tepco’s business fortunes around, the government 
 proposed that the battered utility work together with other companies in 
 operating nuclear power plants and distributing power.\n\nA panel of the 
 Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry urged the company to launch talks 
 with other power companies next year and set up a joint venture in the 
 early 2020s to eventually consolidate their businesses.\n\n“Tepco reform 
 will be the basis of reconstruction in Fukushima and could lead to a new, 
 stronger utilities industry,” said industry minister Hiroshige 
 Seko.\n\n“We will profoundly accept the proposal and drastically carry 
 out reform,” said Tepco President Naomi Hirose.\n\nReactionary 
 Nationalist Abe  and LDP Pushes "conspiracy bill" To Terrorize Political 
 Opponents and Opposition\nGov't mulling submitting 'conspiracy bill' in 
 upcoming Diet 
 session\nhttp://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20170106/p2g/00m/0dm/005000c\nJanuary 
 6, 2017 (Mainichi Japan)\n\nTOKYO (Kyodo) -- Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told 
 a meeting of senior members of the ruling coalition Thursday that the 
 government plans to submit to the Diet a bill aimed at punishing those who 
 abet terrorism, an initiative that has previously drawn criticism as a 
 potential vehicle for human rights violations.\n\nSeveral bills proposing 
 the addition of a conspiracy charge to the existing law on organized crime 
 have floundered in the past, amid concerns the change could encourage more 
 invasive state surveillance and allow investigators to arbitrarily punish 
 people who have not committed any crime.\n\nAbe said the government plans 
 to submit the bill in the next ordinary Diet session to be convened Jan. 
 20, according to an attendee at Thursday's meeting between senior 
 government officials and members of the Liberal Democratic Party and 
 Komeito.\n\nThe bill would aim to enhance Japan's ability to ward off 
 terrorism connected to the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics, Chief 
 Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said.\n\nUnder current Japanese law, 
 people can be charged for inducing another person to commit a crime, or 
 inducing someone to induce a third party to commit a crime.\n\nThe 
 conspiracy charge proposed in the previously scrapped bills would punish 
 those connected with the planning of serious crimes, even if they are not 
 directly involved in the crimes' commission.\n\nThe Justice Ministry has 
 held that such a change would better protect the public from serious 
 crimes, while legal advocacy groups have said a change is unnecessary and 
 could be used to crack down on civic groups.\n\nThe government may try a 
 new approach in the wording of the bill to address such concerns.\n\n"With 
 (the Olympics and Paralympics) now just three years away, we must take 
 every measure to prevent organized crime, including terrorism, in advance," 
 Suga said at a press conference.\n\n"We're making final arrangements 
 reflecting the opinions that have previously come up in the Diet," the top 
 government spokesman said.\n\nThe government views the introduction of such 
 legislation as a prerequisite for Japan to ratify the U.N. Convention 
 against Transnational Organized Crime, adopted in 2000.\n\nSuga pointed out 
 that Japan is among a small minority of U.N. members -- and the only member 
 of the Group of Seven industrialized countries -- yet to have done so.\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/01/07/18795190.php
SUMMARY:SF Japan Consulate Speak-Out Stop Restarting Japan's Nuclear Reactors-Evacuate Children
LOCATION:San Francisco Japanese Consulate\n275 Battery St./California St.\nSan 
 Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/01/07/18795190.php
DTSTART:20170111T230000Z
DTEND:20170112T000000Z
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