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DESCRIPTION:2/11 SF Japan Consulate Speak-out-Evacuate The Families and Children Of 
 Fukushima And Stop The Cover-up\nSaturday  February  11, 2017 3:00 
 PM\nJapanese Consulate\n275 Battery St./California St.\nSan Francisco\n\nOn 
 February 11, 2017 there will be a press conference and rally to stop the 
 start up of all Japanese nuclear power plants. Despite the fact that nearly 
 6 years after Fukushima the 3 melted down plants continue to release 
 radioactive material. Radioactive water continues to flow into the Pacifica 
 and TEPCO has now discovered a hole in the No. 2 reactor with a level of 
 530 sieverts an hour. There is also a growing epidemic of thyroid cancer 
 among children and families and the Abe government is demanding that 
 families move back into the Fukushima area with the argument that they have 
 decontaminated the area. Toshiba which heavily invested in nuclear power 
 has now faced major downsizes as it takes billions of dollars in losses. 
 The government also passed a "secrecy law" that is being used to silence 
 journalists and investigators about what is happening at Fukushima and also 
 they are working to pass a "conspiracy law" to jail political 
 opponents.\nThe drive to militarization is also leading to more new 
 military bases with nuclear weapons in Okinawa. The militarization of Japan 
 and Asia will only hurt the people of Fukushima, Japan and the world.\nJoin 
 with us to let our voices be heard to defend the children and families of 
 Okinawa and the people of Japan from nuclear contamination and 
 destruction.\n \nSpeak Out and Rally initiated by\nNo Nukes Action 
 Committee\nhttp://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/\n\nRadiation level at 
 Fukushima reactor highest since 2011 disaster; grating hole found "If the 
 deposits are confirmed as fuel debris, it would be the first time the 
 utility has found any at the three units that suffered 
 meltdowns."\nhttp://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20170202/p2g/00m/0dm/087000c\nFebruary 
 2, 2017 (Mainichi Japan)\n\nTOKYO (Kyodo) -- The radiation level inside the 
 containment vessel of the No. 2 reactor at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi 
 nuclear complex stood at 530 sieverts per hour at a maximum, the highest 
 since the 2011 disaster, the plant operator said Thursday.\n\nTokyo 
 Electric Power Company Holdings Inc. also announced that based on image 
 analysis, a hole measuring 2 meters in diameter has been found on a metal 
 grating beneath the pressure vessel inside the containment vessel and a 
 portion of the grating was distorted.\n\nAccording to TEPCO, the extremely 
 high radiation level was found near the entrance area in the space just 
 below the pressure vessel. The previously highest radiation level monitored 
 in the interior of the reactor was 73 sieverts per hour.\n\nThe hole could 
 have been caused by nuclear fuel that penetrated the reactor vessel as it 
 overheated and melted due to the loss of reactor cooling functions in the 
 days after a powerful earthquake and tsunami on March 11, 2011 hit 
 northeastern Japan.\n\nAccording to the image analysis, about 1 square 
 meter of the grating was missing.\n\nThe plant operator plans to deploy a 
 robot at the bottom of the reactor containment vessel, which houses the 
 reactor pressure vessel, to check the conditions there.\n\nThe analysis 
 follows TEPCO's discovery Monday of a black mass deposited on the grating 
 directly beneath the pressure vessel, possibly melted fuel after the unit 
 suffered a meltdown along with two other Fukushima Daiichi 
 reactors.\n\nImages captured using a camera attached to a telescopic arm on 
 Monday also showed part of the grating has gone. A further analysis of the 
 images found a 2-meter hole in an area beyond the missing section on the 
 structure.\n\nIf the deposits are confirmed as fuel debris, it would be the 
 first time the utility has found any at the three units that suffered 
 meltdowns.\n\nFollowing one of the world's worst nuclear disasters since 
 the 1986 Chernobyl catastrophe, the No. 1 to 3 reactors suffered fuel 
 meltdowns.\n\nPortions of the fuel in the reactors are believed to have 
 melted through the pressure vessels and accumulated at the bottom of the 
 containment vessels.\n\nThe actual condition of the melted fuel has 
 remained unknown due to high radiation levels.\n\nJapan Toshiba pulling out 
 of overseas nuclear reactor 
 construction\nhttp://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/AJ201701280024.html\nTHE 
 ASAHI SHIMBUN\nJanuary 28, 2017 at 16:30 JST\n\n\nToshiba Corp. President 
 Satoshi Tsunakawa replies to a question during a news conference in Tokyo 
 on Jan. 27. (Shogo Koshida)\nToshiba Corp. has decided to withdraw from the 
 business of constructing nuclear reactors overseas after forecasting a huge 
 deficit for its U.S. subsidiary in the business year ending in 
 March.\n\nThe Tokyo-based electronics appliance maker said Jan. 27 the 
 decision was taken to prevent business deficits from rising sharply again 
 in the future.\n\n“We focused on the nuclear business among all of our 
 energy businesses, but this will change," Toshiba's president, Satoshi 
 Tsunakawa, said in a news conference on Jan. 27. "This will entail a review 
 of our overseas (nuclear) business.”\n\nToshiba had failed to grasp huge 
 losses that would result from the purchase of a company that was 
 constructing nuclear reactors by its subsidiary, Westinghouse Electric 
 Corp.\n\nReflecting on that failure, Toshiba plans to strengthen the 
 supervision of its overseas nuclear business by putting related divisions 
 under the direct control of the president.\n\nIn the future, Toshiba plans 
 to concentrate only on designing, manufacturing and supplying nuclear 
 reactors. It will withdraw from the reactor construction business because 
 of the difficulties in forecasting construction costs.\n\n“We will 
 eliminate the risk from the construction business,” Tsunakawa 
 said.\n\nToshiba has aimed to win orders for 45 or more nuclear reactors 
 overseas by fiscal 2030. However, it now plans to review that goal.\n\nThe 
 deficit from the nuclear business in the United States is likely to 
 increase to about 700 billion yen ($6.1 billion) in this business year. 
 Toshiba plans to announce the exact amount on Feb. 14 when it releases its 
 financial statement for the period from April to December 2016.\n\nOver 200 
 protest gov't's resumption of Henoko base relocation 
 work\nhttp://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20161227/p2a/00m/0na/012000c\nDecember 
 27, 2016 (Mainichi Japan)\n\n\nParticipants of a demonstration against the 
 relocation of U.S. Marine Corps Air Station Futenma to the Henoko district 
 of Nago, Okinawa Prefecture, stage a sit-in in front of the gates at the 
 U.S. Marine Corps' Camp Schwab in Nago on Dec. 27, 2016. (Mainichi)\nNAGO, 
 Okinawa -- More than 200 people staged a protest here against the 
 relocation of U.S. Marine Corps Air Station Futenma to the Henoko district 
 of this city on Dec. 27 as the government resumed construction work the 
 same day, chanting slogans such as "No base for Henoko's sea."\n\nIn front 
 of the gates at U.S. Marine Corps' Camp Schwab in Henoko, a sit-in began 
 shortly past 6:30 a.m. as base security guards wearing helmets kept watch. 
 One after another, protesters arrived by bus or car at the gates used by 
 construction vehicles to join the demonstration.\n\nThis afternoon, the 
 central government resumed base relocation work for the first time since 
 March, after Okinawa Gov. Takeshi Onaga retracted his revocation of his 
 predecessor's approval for reclamation work off Henoko as part of the base 
 relocation work a day earlier.\n\n"This is the start of a new struggle. We 
 must not lose," said Satoru Oshiro, 53, secretary-general of the Okinawa 
 Heiwa Undo Center (Okinawa peace movement center), as he addressed the 
 protesters. In response, rally participants raised placards reading, "No to 
 resumption of construction work!" and "Don't kill the sea."\n\nThe day 
 marked three years since then Okinawa Gov. Hirokazu Nakaima approved the 
 central government's request for reclamation work off Henoko. Gov. Onaga, 
 who replaced Nakaima, subsequently rescinded his predecessor's approval, 
 but he retracted the revocation on Dec. 26 after the Okinawa Prefectural 
 Government lost a court battle against the central government over the 
 issue.\n\nKeiichi Yamauchi, 66, a farmer from the Okinawa Prefecture 
 village of Yomitan who has taken part in anti-base protests for about three 
 years, said, "The situation has returned to what it was that day three 
 years ago." Raising his fist in anger, he added, "If the relocation work is 
 granted, Okinawa, which is filled with U.S. military bases, will face an 
 even worse situation. We must start over."\n\nMakoto Yasu, 51, an 
 occupational therapist from the Okinawa Prefecture town of Yonabaru, joined 
 the protest ahead of his work. "If the base is built here, our daily lives 
 will be further threatened." He emphasized, "The military won't protect the 
 lives of residents."\n\nMeanwhile, Kyoki Nakagawa, secretary-general of the 
 LDP's Okinawa Prefectural Chapter, said, "The Supreme Court ruling showed 
 that the previous governor's decision was not mistaken. Relocation is 
 unavoidable if we are to eliminate the dangers posed by Futenma air 
 station. I will closely watch the progress of construction."\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/02/08/18796304.php
SUMMARY:Speak-out-Evacuate The Families & Children Of Fukushima & Stop The Cover-up By Abe Gvmt
LOCATION:Japanese Consulate\n275 Battery St./California St.\nSan Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/02/08/18796304.php
DTSTART:20170211T230000Z
DTEND:20170212T000000Z
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