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DESCRIPTION:Speak Out and Lessons For Today  on the 6th Anniversary of Fukushima 
 nuclear disaster\n\n6th Anniversary Of Fukushima-Bay Area Action On March 
 11 Anniversary\nDefend The Children and Families and Stop Restart Of 
 Japanese Nuclear Plants\nSaturday March 11, 2017 3:00 PM\nJapanese 
 Consulate\n275 Battery St./California St.\nSan Francisco\n\nThe crisis and 
 dangers of the Fukushima nuclear catastrophe continues unabated. While the 
 Abe government has said the crisis is over the nuclear plants continues to 
 leak radioactive material. They still have not removed all the melted 
 radioactive material from Fukushima unit 2 where there was  estimated 
 radiation of 650 Sieverts per hour according to noise analysis of the 
 images transmitted by the robot before its camera went dark near the melted 
 core. \n\nAt the same time the government is demanding that mothers and 
 their families return to Fukushima or their subsidies will be eliminated. 
 These mothers and their children are still being subjected to continued 
 government harassment and mental stress. On March 11, 2017,  we need to 
 stand with the mothers and their children and demand that they not be 
 forced by the Abe government to return to Fukushima. They have also 
 launched an international petition to oppose the forced relocation to 
 Fukushima.\n\nThe government is also moving ahead with the Olympics despite 
 the dangers of further nuclear releases particularly if there is an 
 earthquake. There are thousands of tanks of contaminated water which likely 
 be ruptured by another major earthquake and release tens of thousands of 
 tons of additional contaminated radioactive water in the Pacific.\n\nThe 
 government has also taken over the Tokyo Electric Power Company and is 
 using the Yakuza to recruit contract workers who are mostly day laborers 
 and immigrants and are not trained properly in health and safety 
 protection. Many of these clean-up workers will likely become sick from 
 their jobs and will not be able to get healthcare because they are 
 temporary contract workers who are really working for the government.\nThe 
 costs have also exploded into billions with no end in sight. Labor railroad 
 groups including Doro Mito are also protesting the restart of railroad 
 lines in contaminated areas.\n\nThe government also pushed Toshiba to push 
 ahead with more nuclear plants around the world. Toshiba bought the 
 Westinghouse nuclear division and it has turned into a financial disaster 
 that is close to destroying the entire company. This is the logic of 
 further investment in the nuclear industry and Toshiba is being forced to 
 sell off it's profitable sections of the company.\n\nAlso the Abe 
 government is intent on crushing all political opposition with a secrecy 
 law which has already been passed  and a "conspiracy law" that would jail 
 journalists and any investigators of the continued nuclear dangers if the 
 government charged they had conspired to release information about the 
 dangers of nuclear plants. The secrecy law is opposed by all journalists in 
 Japan and around the world. This is completely connected with the drive 
 towards war in Asia as the Abe government pushes for a new military base 
 Henoko in Okinawa despite the massive opposition of the people of Okinawa. 
 The base is which is also supported by the US government and US politicians 
 is being paid for by the Japanese people while social services and 
 healthcare face cuts in Japan.\n\nThe Trump government is also supportive 
 of Japan openly developing nuclear weapons and escalating the dangers of 
 nuclear war in Asia and around the world. They support the startup of 
 Japanese nuclear plants and politicians of both parties continue to be 
 silent about this danger to Japan, California and the world.\n\nIt is time 
 to speak out on the 6th anniversary and unite with the people of Japan who 
 by a vast majority are opposed to nuclear power and want  to stop nuclear 
 power and nuclear weapons worldwide.\n\nPlease contact No Nukes Action if 
 your organization would like to endorse and speak.\n\nFor more 
 information\nhttp://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/\n\n\n\n3/12 Berkeley Forum 
  ----The Commemoration of the 6th Anniversary of Fukushima Meltdown---- 
 "Kindle A Light on The Darkness of Our Time~Militarization, Racism and 
 Nuclear Dangers"                                      \n----The 
 Commemoration of the 6th Anniversary of Fukushima Meltdown----\n\n          
         DATE & TIME  :  Sunday March 12\n                                   
           1:30 pm to 3:30 pm ( Door opens at 1:00 pm )\n                  P 
 L A C E         :  Berkeley Public Central Library, at Community Room on 
 3rd floor\n                                             2090 Kittredge St ( 
 at Shattuck), Berkeley\n                  SPONCORS    :  Earth Gathering, 
 No Nukes Action\n                  CO-SPONSOR:  miho Kim lee (金美穂) of 
 Eclipse Rising\n                  ADMISSION    :  Free\n\nFor more 
 information\nhttp://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/\n\n\n\nFukushima's 
 record-high radiation broke a cleaning robot after two 
 hours\nhttp://www.theverge.com/2017/2/10/14580674/fukushima-record-high-radiation-cleaning-robot-recalled\nRadiation 
 levels are clocking in at 650 Sieverts per hour\nby Natt Garun@nattgarun  
 Feb 10, 2017, 4:16pm EST\n\n\nA robot sent into a Fukushima reactor to 
 inspect and clean the nuclear plant had to abruptly end its mission after 
 excess radiation fried the robot’s camera. It was the first time a robot 
 had entered the Unit 2 reactor since the 2011 earthquake and tsunami, 
 reports the Associated Press.\n\nTHE ROBOT ENDURED AN ESTIMATED RADIATION 
 OF 650 SIEVERTS PER HOUR\nThe cleaning robot was recalled after just two 
 hours into the mission after enduring an estimated radiation of 650 
 Sieverts per hour according to noise analysis of the images transmitted by 
 the robot before its camera went dark. The robot was designed for up to 
 1,000 Sieverts of cumulative exposure.\n\nThe AP reports that level of 
 radiation would kill a human being instantly. After the cameras started 
 malfunctioning, the team decided to pull the robot back from its mission 
 before losing it entirely. Images captured from the chamber before the 
 robot malfunctioned showed layers of melted paint, cable insulation, and 
 metal grates.\n\n\nTokyo Electric Power Company said the robot was deployed 
 to observe and clear the passageway with a high-pressure water nozzle so 
 the team could send another robot to assess the structural damage. Pulling 
 the first robot early means the follow-up machine will have more work to do 
 and less time to do it, since both robots were designed to withstand the 
 same amount of radiation.\n\nThe high levels of radiation may seem 
 alarming, but there’s good news: it's contained, and there are no reports 
 of new leaks from the plant. That means that the radiation shouldn't affect 
 nearby townships. Higher levels of radiation could also mean the robot is 
 getting closer to the precise source of radioactivity to properly remove 
 the melted fuel.\n\n'Fukushima catastrophe ongoing: Leakage on a daily 
 basis’\nhttps://www.rt.com/op-edge/376607-leakage-radiation-fukushima-japan/\nPublished 
 time: 7 Feb, 2017 16:56\n\n© Tomohiro Ohsumi / Reuters \n1.3K65\nThere are 
 many shoes still to drop at Fukushima Daiichi, said Kevin Kamps, 
 radioactive waste monitor at Beyond Nuclear. If something goes wrong with 
 the radioactive waste storage pools, there could be a release of high-level 
 radioactivity into the air, he added. \nTrends\nFukushima nuclear 
 disaster\nRadiation at Fukushima’s nuclear power plant is at its highest 
 level since the tsunami-triggered meltdown nearly six years ago. Tokyo 
 Electric Power Company (TEPCO)  is reporting atmospheric readings inside 
 Daiichi’s reactor No.2 are as high as 530 sieverts an hour, while a human 
 exposed to a single dose of 10 sieverts would die in a couple of 
 weeks.\n\nREAD MORE: Record high fatal radiation levels, hole in reactor 
 detected at crippled Fukushima nuclear facility\n\nRT: Can you explain what 
 is likely going on here?\n\nKevin Kamps: This catastrophe that is ongoing 
 is nearly six years old at this point. The fuel, the melted cores have been 
 missing an action. TEPCO doesn’t know where they are; the Japanese 
 government doesn’t know where they are; nobody knows where they are. What 
 could have happened is these probes, these cameras, these robots, these 
 radiation monitors that are being sent in by TEPCO to try to figure out 
 what is going on, may have encountered the closest they have come yet to 
 these melted cores. They may even have come upon melted fuel that is not 
 under water, and water serves as a radiation shielding. So if this is an 
 open area and there is no water – that could explain.\n\nBut what 
 you’ve got are melted reactor cores. Of course, human beings can’t be 
 in operating atomic reactors. They also can’t be in this area where there 
 is a meltdown. There is also imagery – it looks like a melt through of a 
 metal grade. It all stands to reason that the cores melted through the 
 reactor pressure vessels and down into the containment structures right 
 through that metal grating.\n\nIt is not unexpected, but we still don’t 
 know where the cores are. There are claims that “it’s all contained, 
 don’t worry about it.” It is indisputable that there is a daily flow of 
 radioactively contaminated groundwater into the ocean. The figures 
 something like 80,000 gallons per day of relatively low-level radioactive 
 waste water. Then you’ve got those storage tanks – we’re talking 
 800,000 tons of highly radioactive water stored in tanks. Every day they 
 pour a hundred tons of water on each of these three melted down cores. 
 Sometimes they lose those tanks. They leak, they overflow – it is an 
 ongoing catastrophe. \n\n\nRT: So the contamination, in this case, could 
 leak out, couldn’t it?\n\nKK: There is some leakage on a daily basis. 
 Then they try to capture as much as they can and contain it in the storage 
 tanks, which they sometimes lose, whether during a typhoon or through human 
 error - they have had overflows. So many shoes can still drop at Fukushima 
 Daiichi. One of the ones is the high radioactive waste storage pools that 
 aren’t even inside radiological containment. They don’t have all of 
 that spent nuclear fuel transferred to a safer location in a couple of the 
 units still. If something were to go wrong with that – those would be 
 open air releases of very high-level radioactivity.\n\nThe prime minister 
 at the time the catastrophe began, [Naoto] Kan, had a contingency plan to 
 evacuate all of North-East Japan – up to 50 million people. It was 
 predominantly because of those storage pools. We’re still in that 
 predicament- if one of those pools were to go up in flames. As Tokyo plans 
 to host the 2020 Olympics and bring in many millions of extra people into 
 this already densely populated area -it is not a good idea.\n\n\nRT: Going 
 back to this specific leak: how does this complicate the cleanup efforts 
 there? Is it possible even to get something in there right now to examine 
 what is going on?\n\nKK: State of the art robotic technology – Japan is a 
 leader in robotics – can only last so long, because the electronics get 
 fried by the gamma radiation, and probably neutron radiation that is in 
 there. That is the situation deep in there. They are already saying it will 
 take 40 years to so-called decommission this, but that may be 
 optimistic.\n\nRT: Also in December the government said it is going to take 
 twice as much money – nearly twice as much as they originally thought – 
 to decommission that. Does this make matters ever worse – this leak? Or 
 is this just kind of the situation to expect at this point?\n\nKK: It just 
 shows how dire the situation is. The figures of $150 billion to 
 decommission – I have seen figures from a think tank in Japan sided by 
 Green Peace Japan up to $600 billion. If you do full cost accounting: where 
 is this high-level radioactive waste going to go? It is going to need a 
 deep geological depository. You have to build that and operate it. That 
 costs a hundred billion or more. So when you do full cost accounting, this 
 catastrophe could cost hundreds of billions of dollars to recover from. 
 We’re just in the beginning.\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\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\n\nU.S. deleted danger of 
 Osprey aircraft from Okinawa base 
 report\nhttp://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20170130/p2a/00m/0na/002000c\nJanuary 
 30, 2017 (Mainichi Japan)\n\n<6.jpg>\nA U.S. Marine Corps MV-22 Osprey 
 aircraft. (Mainichi)\nThe United States had mentioned the danger of MV-22 
 Osprey military aircraft but deleted reference to the aircraft from a 1996 
 final report on a bilateral agreement to return the U.S. Marine Corps Air 
 Station Futenma in Okinawa Prefecture to Japan, it has been learned.\n\nA 
 list of potential questions and answers on U.S. bases in Okinawa dated Nov. 
 27, 1996 -- which U.S. forces compiled and shared with Japan's Defense 
 Agency, the predecessor of the Defense Ministry -- mentions 13 points of 
 contention with Osprey vertical takeoff and landing aircraft. The list is 
 among U.S. documents on which University of the Ryukyus professor Masaaki 
 Gabe of international politics compiled a report as part of the 
 achievements of his research subsidized by the Education, Culture, Sports, 
 Science and Technology Ministry.\n\nU.S. forces had reportedly considered 
 deploying Ospreys to Okinawa Prefecture since the 1990s.\n\nThe list of 
 potential questions and answers points out that the structure of Ospreys is 
 more complex than existing helicopters, that the development of Ospreys had 
 been nearly suspended after accidents during test flights were reported. 
 The list contains a potential question as to whether Ospreys are safe 
 compared with existing helicopters, but has no recommended answer to this 
 question.\n\nThe minutes of Japan-U.S. consultations on Oct. 22 of the same 
 year show that Tokyo asked Washington for advice on how to explain the 
 length of the runway at a substitute facility for Futenma base to the 
 Okinawa Prefectural Government and local residents.\n\nThe minutes cite 
 three potential answers -- not to mention Ospreys at all, to specifically 
 mention the aircraft and to construct a runway for existing aircraft and 
 extend the runway after the U.S. government announced that Ospreys would be 
 deployed to the substitute base.\n\nThe list recommends that the Defense 
 Agency clearly explain that the sea-based substitute facility is a heliport 
 to which helicopters deployed to Futenma would be relocated without 
 directly mentioning Ospreys.\n\nThe draft of the final report by the 
 Special Action Committee on Okinawa (SACO) on the return of the Futenma 
 base to Japan, which was drawn up on Nov. 22, 1996, had stated, "The SBF 
 will be designed to support the basing of helicopter and MV-22 (Osprey) 
 units." However, the SACO final report, which was signed on Dec. 2, 1996, 
 says, "The SBF will be designed to support the basing of helicopter assets, 
 and will also be able to support short-field aircraft operations."\n\nAt 
 the time, Ospreys were still being developed. A prototype Osprey crashed in 
 June 1991, and another plunged to the ground after its engine caught fire 
 during a final approach in July 1992, killing seven people including 
 Marines.\n\nMoreover, the minutes of the bilateral consultations also show 
 that the United States underscored the need to show political consideration 
 to Okinawa residents over the deployment of Ospreys to a substitute 
 facility for Futenma base. However, the document shows that Japan replied 
 that necessary conditions for U.S. forces' operations should be 
 prioritized.\n\nUniversity of Nagasaki professor Takao Sebata, who is well 
 versed in U.S. political and diplomatic issues, said, "Japan always tries 
 to not make waves in Japan-U.S. relations. It's an 'America First' policy. 
 Japan has surmised U.S. intentions too much and failed to negotiate with 
 the United States on an equal footing," he said.\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\n\nFukushima: a 
 Lurking Global 
 Catastrophe?\nhttp://www.counterpunch.org/2017/02/20/fukushima-a-lurking-global-catastrophe/\nFEBRUARY 
 20, 2017\nFukushima: a Lurking Global Catastrophe?\nby ROBERT 
 HUNZIKER\n\n\nYear over year, ever since 2011, the Fukushima Daiichi 
 nuclear meltdown grows worse and worse, an ugly testimonial to the inherent 
 danger of generating electricity via nuclear fission, which produces 
 isotopes, some of the most deadly poisonous elements on the face of the 
 planet.\n\nFukushima Diiachi has been, and remains, one of the world’s 
 largest experiments, i.e., what to do when all hell breaks lose aka The 
 China Syndrome. “Scientists still don’t have all the information they 
 need for a cleanup that the government estimates will take four decades and 
 cost ¥8 trillion. It is not yet known if the fuel melted into or through 
 the containment vessel’s concrete floor, and determining the fuel’s 
 radioactivity and location is crucial to inventing the technology to remove 
 the melted fuel,” (Emi Urabe, Fukushima Fuel-Removal Quest Leaves Trail 
 of Dead Robots, The Japan Times, Feb. 17, 2017).\n\nAs it happens, 
 “”inventing technology” is experimental stage stuff. Still, there are 
 several knowledgeable sources that believe the corium, or melted core, will 
 never be recovered. Then what?\n\nAccording to a recent article, 
 “Potential Global Catastrophe of the Reactor No. 2 at Fukushima 
 Daiichi,” d/d Feb. 11, 2017 by Dr. Shuzo Takemoto, professor, Department 
 of Geophysics, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University: The Fukushima 
 nuclear facility is a global threat on level of a major 
 catastrophe.\n\nMeanwhile, the Abe administration dresses up Fukushima 
 Prefecture for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, necessitating a big fat question: 
 Who in their right mind would hold Olympics in the neighborhood of three 
 out-of-control nuclear meltdowns that could get worse, worse, and still 
 worse? After all, that’s the pattern over the past 5 years; it gets worse 
 and worse. Dismally, nobody can possibly know how much worse by 2020. Not 
 knowing is the main concern about holding Olympics in the backyard of a 
 nuclear disaster zone, especially as nobody knows what’s happening. 
 Nevertheless and resolutely, according to PM Abe and the IOC, the games go 
 on.\n\nAlong the way, it’s taken Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) 
 nearly six years to finally get an official reading of radiation levels of 
 the meltdown but in only one unit. Analysis of Unit #2 shows radiation 
 levels off-the-charts at 530 Sieverts, or enough to kill within minutes, 
 illustrative of why it is likely impossible to decommission units 1, 2, and 
 3. No human can withstand that exposure and given enough time, frizzled 
 robots are as dead as a doornail.\n\n“A short-term, whole-body dose of 
 over 10 sieverts would cause immediate illness and subsequent death within 
 a few weeks, according to the World Nuclear Association” (Emi Urabe, 
 Fukushima Fuel-Removal Quest Leaves Trail of Dead Robots, The Japan Times, 
 Feb. 17, 2017).\n\nAlthough Fukushima’s similar to Chernobyl Exclusion 
 Zone in some respects, where 1,000 square miles has been permanently sealed 
 off, Fukushima’s different, as the Abe administration is already 
 repopulating portions of Fukushima. If they don’t repopulate, how can the 
 Olympics be held with food served from Fukushima and including events like 
 baseball held in Fukushima Prefecture?\n\nWithout question, an old saw – 
 what goes around comes around – rings true when it comes to radiation, 
 and it should admonish (but it doesn’t phase ‘em) strident nuclear 
 proponents, claiming Fukushima is an example of how safe nuclear power is 
 “because there are so few, if any, deaths” (not true). As Chernobyl 
 clearly demonstrates: Over time, radiation cumulates in bodily organs. For 
 a real life example of how radiation devastates human bodies, consider this 
 fact: 453,391 children with bodies ravaged, none born at the time of the 
 Chernobyl meltdown in 1986, today receive special healthcare because of 
 Chernobyl radiation-related medical problems like cancer, digestive, 
 respiratory, musculoskeletal, eye disease, blood disease, congenital 
 malformation, and genetic abnormalities. Their parents were children in the 
 Chernobyl zone in 1986 (Source: Chernobyl’s Legacy: Kids With Bodies 
 Ravaged by Disaster, USA Today, April 17, 2016).\n\nMaking matters worse 
 yet, Fukushima Diiachi sets smack dab in the middle of earthquake country, 
 which defines the boundaries of Japan. In that regard, according to Dr. 
 Shuzo Takemoto, professor, Department of Geophysics, Graduate School of 
 Science, Kyoto University: “The problem of Unit 2… If it should 
 encounter a big earth tremor, it will be destroyed and scatter the 
 remaining nuclear fuel and its debris, making the Tokyo metropolitan area 
 uninhabitable. The Tokyo Olympics in 2020 will then be utterly out of the 
 question,” (Shuzo Takemoto, Potential Global Catastrophe of the Reactor 
 No. 2 at Fukushima Daiichi, February 11, 2017).\n\nAccordingly, the greater 
 Tokyo metropolitan area remains threatened for as long as Fukushima Diiachi 
 is out of control, which could be for generations, not years. Not only 
 that, Gee-Whiz, what if the big one hits during the Olympics? After all, 
 earthquakes come unannounced. Regrettably, Japan has had 564 earthquakes 
 the past 365 days. It’s an earthquake-ridden country. Japan sits at the 
 boundary of 4 tectonic plates shot through with faults in zigzag patterns, 
 very lively and of even more concern, the Nankai Trough, the candidate for 
 the big one, sits nearly directly below Tokyo. On a geological time scale, 
 it may be due for action anytime within the next couple of decades. 
 Fukushima Prefecture’s not that far away.\n\nFurthermore, the Fukushima 
 Diiachi nuclear complex is tenuous, at best: “All four buildings were 
 structurally damaged by the original earthquake some five years ago and by 
 the subsequent hydrogen explosions so should there be an earthquake greater 
 than seven on the Richter scale, it is very possible that one or more of 
 these structures could collapse, leading to a massive release of radiation 
 as the building falls on the molten core beneath.” (Helen Caldicott: The 
 Fukushima Nuclear Meltdown Continues Unabated, Independent Australia, 
 February 13, 2017).\n\nComplicating matters further, the nuclear site is 
 located at the base of a mountain range. Almost daily, water flows from the 
 mountain range beneath the nuclear plant, liquefying the ground, a 
 sure-fire setup for cascading buildings when the next big one hits. For 
 over five years now, radioactive water flowing out of the power plant into 
 the Pacific carries isotopes like cesium 134 and cesium 137, strontium 90, 
 tritium, plutonium americium and up to 100 more isotopes, none of which are 
 healthy for marine or human life, quite the opposite in fact as those 
 isotopes slowly cumulate, and similar to the Daleks of Doctor Who fame (BBC 
 science fiction series, 1963-present) “Exterminate! Exterminate! 
 Exterminate!”\n\nIsotopes bio-concentrate up the food chain from algae to 
 crustaceans to small fish to big fish to bigger humans. Resultant cancer 
 cells incubate anytime from two years to old age, leading to death. 
 That’s what cancer does; it kills.\n\nStill, the fact remains nobody 
 really knows for sure how directly Fukushima Diiachi radiation affects 
 marine life, but how could it be anything other than bad? After all, it’s 
 a recognized fact that radiation cumulates over time; it’s tasteless, 
 colorless, and odorless as it cumulates in the body, whether in fish or 
 further up the food chain in humans. It travels!\n\nAn example is Cesium 
 137 one of the most poisonous elements on the planet. One gram of Cesium 
 137 the size of a dime will poison one square mile of land for hundreds of 
 years. That’s what’s at stake at the world’s most rickety nuclear 
 plant, and nobody can do anything about it. In fact, nobody knows what to 
 do. They really don’t.\n\nWhen faced with the prospect of not knowing 
 what to do, why not bring on the Olympics? That’s pretty good cover for a 
 messy situation, making it appear to hundreds of thousands of attendees, as 
 well as the world community “all is well.” But, is it? 
 Honestly….\n\nThe Fukushima nuclear meltdown presents a special problem 
 for the world community. Who knows what to believe after PM Abe lied to the 
 IOC to get the Olympics; see the following headline from Reuters News: 
 “Abe’s Fukushima ‘Under Control’ Pledge to Secure Olympics Was a 
 Lie: Former PM,” Reuters, Sept. 7, 2016.\n\n“Abe gave the assurances 
 about safety at the Fukushima plant in his September 2013 speech to the 
 International Olympic Committee to allay concerns about awarding the Games 
 to Tokyo. The comment met with considerable criticism at the time… Mr. 
 Abe’s ‘under control remark, that was a lie,’ Koizumi (former PM) now 
 74 and his unruly mane of hair turned white, told a news conference where 
 he repeated his opposition to nuclear power,” Ibid.\n\nAs such, a very 
 big conundrum precedes the 2020 games: How can the world community, as well 
 as Olympians, believe anything the Abe administration says about the safety 
 and integrity of Fukushima?\n\nStill, the world embraces nuclear power more 
 so than ever before as it continues to expand and grow. Sixty reactors are 
 currently under construction in fifteen countries. In all, 160 power 
 reactors are in the planning stage and 300 more have been proposed. 
 Pro-Nuke-Heads claim Fukushima proves how safe nuclear power is because 
 there are so few, if any, deaths, as to be inconsequential. That’s a 
 boldfaced lie.\n\nHere’s one of several independent testimonials on 
 deaths because of Fukushima Diiachi radiation exposure (many, many, many 
 more testimonials are highlighted in prior articles, including USS Ronald 
 Reagan sailors on humanitarian rescue missions at the time): “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,” Katsutaka Idogawa, former mayor of Futaba (Fukushima 
 Prefecture), Fukushima Disaster: Tokyo Hides Truth as Children Die, Become 
 Ill from Radiation – Ex-Mayor, RT News, April 21, 2014.\n\nRobert 
 Hunziker lives in Los Angeles and can be reached at 
 roberthunziker@icloud.com\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/02/21/18796684.php
SUMMARY:Speak Out and Lessons For Today on the 6th Anniversary of Fukushima nuclear disaster
LOCATION:Japanese Consulate\n275 Battery St./California St.\nSan Francisco\n
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/02/21/18796684.php
DTSTART:20170311T230000Z
DTEND:20170312T003000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
