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DESCRIPTION:11/11 Rally-Speak Out At SF Japan Consulate-Stop Abe Government From 
 Restarting NUKE Plants &  Defend the Children and Families of 
 Fukushima\n\nRally Speak Out\nSaturday November 11, 2017 3:00 PM\nSan 
 Francisco Japanese Consulate\n275 Battery St. near California St.\nSan 
 Francisco\n\nDespite the denials by the Japanese Abe government, Fukushima 
 continues to contaminate the population of the area and the world. The 
 government has declared that the area has been decontaminated but the 
 radioactive water continues to accumulate in thousands of tanks. The 
 clean-up has failed to even remove the radioactive material from the 
 reactors that melted down due to the deadly high level of radiation that 
 has even destroyed robots. There is already  22 million cu. meters of 
 contaminated waste yet the government continues to claim that it is safe to 
 return and is pushing to restart additional nuclear reactors.\nThe 
 government is also pushing ahead to demand that the residents including 
 families return to Fukushima or face the removal of their subsidies. This 
 despite the fact that the courts have ruled that TEPCO now controlled by 
 the government is financially responsible for the costs of this disaster 
 for the people.\nThe government at the same time  has declared that it is 
 preparing for a massive Nankai Trough earthquake on Japan’s Pacific coast 
 that according to even the government's own estimate  might kill 320,000  
 people yet it is planning to reopen nuclear plants in the very places it 
 says there is a danger of a major historic quake that would create many 
 nuclear meltdowns and a massive nuclear cloud of radioactive contamination 
 threatening not just Japan but entire humanity and the environment.\n\nThe 
 effort to reopen the nuclear plants is now combined with growing repression 
 of the people with a secrecy bill and conspiracy law that will allow the 
 government to charge journalists and citizens with crimes who are working 
 to get information out about the dangers of Fukushima and the nuclear power 
 industry.\nThe Abe government is now working with Trump to remilitarize and 
 remove Article 9 of the constitution which forbids offensive war and Trump 
 is demanding that Japan buy more military equipment and weapons. Over 
 40,000 people marched in Tokyo last weekend to oppose war and 
 militarization yet the government is pushing ahead despite mass 
 opposition.\n\nIt is time to speak out to defend the people of Fukushima 
 and oppose the restarting of Japan’s nuclear plants and oppose 
 militarization of Japan including the development of nuclear 
 weapons.\n\nMake sure your voice be heard.\n\n\nSpeak Out and Rally 
 initiated by\nNo Nukes Action 
 Committee\nhttp://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/\n\nSprawling radioactive 
 waste storage facility opens for business in 
 Fukushima\nHTTPS://WWW.JAPANTIMES.CO.JP/NEWS/2017/10/28/NATIONAL/SPRAWLING-RADIOACTIVE-WASTE-STORAGE-FACILITY-OPENS-BUSINESS-FUKUSHIMA/#.WFVXHBTD2-Q\nKYODO\n\n\nOCT 
 28, 2017\nARTICLE HISTORY\nPRINTSHARE\nThe government’s new radioactive 
 waste storage facility in Fukushima Prefecture kicked into full gear on 
 Saturday after completing a roughly four-month trial run.\nWhile the 
 facility near the crippled Fukushima No. 1 nuclear complex is designed to 
 store soil and other tainted waste collected during decontamination work 
 for up to 30 years, it remains only half complete six years after the 
 triple core meltdown struck in March 2011.\nAn estimated 22 million cu. 
 meters of contaminated waste exists in Fukushima, but the facility does not 
 yet have enough capacity to store it all, and residents fear it will sit 
 there permanently in the absence of a final disposal site.\nThe government 
 has been able to buy only 40 percent of the land so far but eventually 
 plans to secure 1,600 hectares for the facility, which is expected to 
 generate ¥1.6 trillion ($14.1 billion) in construction and related 
 costs.\nThe storage facility is urgently needed to consolidate the 13 
 million cu. meters of radioactive waste scattered around the prefecture. 
 The prolonged disposal work, among other concerns, is said to be keeping 
 residents away from their hometowns even when the evacuation orders are 
 lifted.\nAlso on Saturday, the government began full operation of a 
 facility where waste intended for incineration, such as trees and plants, 
 is separated from the rest.\nContaminated soil is sorted into different 
 categories depending on cesium level before storage.\n\nJapan Operator set 
 to request 20 years extra for Tokai nuclear 
 plant\nhttp://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/AJ201710270036.html\nTHE ASAHI 
 SHIMBUN\nOctober 27, 2017 at 17:35 JST\n\nThe Tokai No. 2 nuclear plant in 
 Tokai, Ibaraki Prefecture (Asahi Shimbun file photo)\nJapan Atomic Power 
 Co. is preparing to apply for a 20-year extension to operate the aged Tokai 
 No. 2 nuclear plant beyond its 40-year life span, sources said.\n\nSuch an 
 extension would be the first among Japan’s aged boiling-water reactors, 
 which include those at the crippled Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power 
 plant.\n\nTokai No. 2 nuclear plant’s reactor, which went into service in 
 1978, is in a heavily populated area not far from Tokyo.\n\nThe company 
 deems the 20-year extension of the plant in Tokai, Ibaraki Prefecture, as 
 imperative to securing a stable revenue stream, the sources 
 said.\n\nHowever, the plan is expected to bring a host of challenges to the 
 operator.\n\nOne is how to secure funds so as to cover the costs to improve 
 safety at the old facility required under the more stringent nuclear 
 regulations set after the 2011 Fukushima disaster.\n\nAnother is to ease 
 concerns of local governments of the area where nearly 1 million residents 
 could be affected in the event of a serious accident.\n\nThe move toward 
 the extension comes as the Nuclear Regulation Authority is set to rule that 
 the plant has met standards set in the new regulations necessary for a 
 restart, the sources said.\n\nThe Tokai No. 2 plant, about 120 kilometers 
 from the heart of the capital, houses one unit capable of generating 1.1 
 gigawatts.\n\nIf Japan Atomic Power proceeds with its plan to apply for the 
 extension, it needs to submit the application to the NRA by Nov. 28.\n\nThe 
 Tokai No. 2 plant narrowly escaped a catastrophe like the one at the 
 Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant when it was struck by the magnitude-9.0 Great 
 East Japan Earthquake and tsunami on March 11, 2011.\n\nIt took Japan 
 Atomic Power three and a half days to shut the reactor down when the 
 disaster knocked out power. One of the three emergency generators installed 
 there became dysfunctional after they were submerged by tsunami.\n\nSome 
 experts said it could have become impossible to keep cooling the reactor if 
 the tsunami had been 70 centimeters higher.\n\nJapan Atomic Power is keen 
 to extend the operation of the Tokai No. 2 nuclear plant as the facility is 
 the only venue that will feasibly bring it revenue.\n\n“It has no option 
 but to apply for the extended operation,” said an official familiar with 
 the management of the company.\n\nApart from the Tokai No. 2 nuclear plant, 
 Japan Atomic Power owns three other reactors: one at the Tokai nuclear 
 plant, also in Tokai, and two at the Tsuruga nuclear plant in Tsuruga, 
 Fukui Prefecture.\n\nThe one at the Tokai nuclear plant and one unit at the 
 Tsuruga nuclear plant are on their way to being 
 decommissioned.\n\nProspects for whether the company can win approval for a 
 restart of the remaining reactor at the Tsuruga nuclear plant are bleak, as 
 it has been reported that the facility was likely built on an active 
 seismic fault.\n\nIf the company pulled the plug on the Tokai No. 2 nuclear 
 plant, it would mean that it would be left with no revenue sources.\n\nThat 
 expected management crisis could likely affect the bottom line of utilities 
 such Tokyo Electric Power Co., the operator of the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear 
 plant, which has a stake in Japan Atomic Power.\n\nThe Tokai No. 2 nuclear 
 plant supplies power to TEPCO and Tohoku Electric Power Co., and although 
 extending its operation would keep those revenue sources open, it would 
 also come with a huge price tag.\n\nThe company said Oct. 26 that the 
 estimated costs of the safeguarding measures for a restart of the plant 
 will balloon to about 180 billion yen ($1.58 billion), more than double the 
 78 billion yen projected initially.\n\nThe total sum is expected to further 
 increase if Japan Atomic Power chooses to operate the plant beyond the 
 40-year limit, according to the sources.\n\nThe plant’s extended 
 operation could prove to be a big headache for local governments 
 nearby.\n\nMunicipalities within a 30-kilometer radius are required to draw 
 up evacuation plans to prepare for a contingency in the post-Fukushima 
 crisis years.\n\nHammering out workable plans for close to 1 million 
 residents in the area is expected to be difficult, the sources 
 said.\n\nEven the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, which oversees 
 the nuclear industry, is cautious about the extension.\n\n“The 
 consequences would be too enormous if an accident did occur,” said a 
 ministry official.\n\n\n(This story was written by Tsuneo Sasai and Yusuke 
 Ogawa.)\n\n\n\nJapan NRA approves safety measures at TEPCO plant in 
 Niigata\nhttp://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/AJ201710040031.html\nBy MASANOBU 
 HIGASHIYAMA/ Staff Writer\nOctober 4, 2017 at 16:10 JST\n\nThe Nuclear 
 Regulation Authority confirmed the results of its screening on the 
 technological aspects of the No. 6 and No. 7 reactors that TEPCO wants to 
 bring online at its Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear plant.\n\nIt was also the 
 first time for the NRA to conclude that boiling-water reactors, the same 
 type as those at TEPCO’s crippled Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant, met the 
 new safety standards adopted after the meltdowns at the plant in 
 2011.\n\nThe NRA plans to hear opinions from the public about its judgment 
 for 30 days before deciding on whether to make the approval official. It 
 will also solicit the views of the minister of economy, trade and 
 industry.\n\nAs one condition for official approval, the NRA is requiring 
 the industry minister to oversee the utility’s management policy 
 concerning its initiative and responsibility for work to decommission the 
 Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant.\n\nFrom now, the NRA will check equipment 
 designs and security regulations, including how TEPCO will guarantee its 
 promise that its priority is on safety, not economic benefits.\n\nThe 
 NRA’s screening process at the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear plant went 
 beyond checking technological aspects of TEPCO’s safety measures. Given 
 TEPCO’s history of mistakes and blunders, NRA members also discussed 
 whether the utility was even eligible to operate nuclear power 
 plants.\n\nIn response to the NRA’s demands that TEPCO take full 
 responsibility for decommissioning the Fukushima No. 1 plant, the utility 
 in late August stressed that its stance of putting importance on safety is 
 “a promise to the people.”\n\nThe NRA then approved TEPCO’s 
 eligibility but attached some conditions.\n\nIn late September, however, it 
 came to light that workers at the Fukushima No. 1 plant were erroneously 
 setting water gauges to measure groundwater levels of wells around reactor 
 buildings, which could cause leaks of highly contaminated water to the 
 outside water.\n\nInspectors will face a formidable challenge in judging 
 individual issues facing TEPCO based on security regulations.\n\nHowever, 
 even if TEPCO passes all of the screenings, it must win the consent of 
 local governments to restart the reactors at the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear 
 plant.\n\nNiigata Governor Ryuichi Yoneyama has said that he will wait for 
 three or four years to make decision on the restarts, until his prefectural 
 government completes its own investigation into the cause of the 2011 
 nuclear disaster at the Fukushima No. 1 plant.\n\n\n\nNew guidelines 
 outlined to deal with quake that may kill 
 320,000\nhttp://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/AJ201709270052.html\nBy TAKAOKI 
 YAMAMOTO/ Staff Writer\nSeptember 27, 2017 at 18:20 JST\n\n\nPolice 
 officers help an "injured resident" leave a building in an earthquake drill 
 in Yatomi, Aichi Prefecture, on Sept. 1, 2016. The aim of the drill is to 
 prepare for a massive Nankai Trough earthquake along Japan’s Pacific 
 coast. (Asahi Shimbun file photo)\nNew alert guidelines concerning a 
 long-expected and much-feared Nankai Trough earthquake that could claim 
 320,000 lives will be activated in November.\n\nThe government’s Central 
 Disaster Management Council outlined the strengthening of measures to 
 prepare for such a contingency in its final report submitted to Hachiro 
 Okonogi, minister of disaster management, on Sept. 26.\n\nThe trough is a 
 shallow seabed depression that runs 700 kilometers along the Pacific seabed 
 off Shizuoka Prefecture and down to Kyushu.\n\nThe Japan Meteorological 
 Agency (JMA) will provide alerts to people in the region facing the trench 
 when they find evidence of extraordinary underground phenomena on strain 
 meters and other gauges installed in the Tokai region. The largest city 
 there is Nagoya.\n\nBulletins will also urge residents to confirm where 
 their shelters are located and how to reach them. They will be reminded to 
 have emergency supplies on hand and secure household furniture to stop it 
 from falling over.\n\nA panel of experts to be set up by the JMA will 
 evaluate this evidence and determine if it could be linked to a possible 
 megaquake.\n\nThe JMA will also call an emergency meeting of officials from 
 government ministries and agencies to weigh up disaster management 
 options.\n\nThe chances of a massive Nankai Trough earthquake occurring 
 within the next 30 years have been put at 70 percent after a study by 
 government experts, who said up to 320,000 lives could be lost. Such a 
 quake would have a magnitude of at least 8 and possibly even 9.\n\nThe last 
 big Nankai trough earthquake, in 1854, caused thousands of deaths.\n\nThe 
 new system will replace the existing disaster preparedness plan, which was 
 based on the concept that predicting a megaquake within a range of a few 
 days could be possible.\n\nThe council dumped this longstanding view in 
 August.\n\nThe panel concluded that it is impossible to predict a possible 
 megaquake on the basis of scientific findings, which finally reflects what 
 many seismologists had long argued.\n\nThe Nankai Trough consists of three 
 main sections, from east to west, Tokai, Tonankai and 
 Nankai.\n\nSeismologists fear that Tokai, Tonankai and Nankai earthquakes 
 could occur simultaneously in a worst-case scenario.\n\nThe current 
 disaster preparedness plan was compiled under the 1978 special measures 
 concerning countermeasures for large-scale earthquakes. It was designed to 
 prepare for the long-anticipated Tokai earthquake, which is predicted to 
 strike off Shizuoka Prefecture.\n\nUnder this old plan, the prime minister 
 was expected to declare an emergency warning when the Tokai quake was 
 predicted by experts. Train services would be suspended while other 
 measures kick in.\n\nUnder the new system, the JMA will issue bulletins for 
 residents in the region of expected danger zones for the Tonankai and 
 Nankai earthquake, not just the Tokai temblor.\n\nThe expanded preparation 
 will involve 707 municipalities in 29 prefectures. The preparedness for the 
 Tokai earthquake concerned 157 municipalities in eight prefectures.\n\nBut 
 the suspension of banking services, which is part of the old plan, will be 
 dropped.\n\nThe government will also draft guidelines for local governments 
 that could be affected by the disaster so they can draw up evacuation plans 
 based on their needs in advance.\n\nMeetings will be held with local 
 governments and businesses in the prefectures of Shizuoka, Kochi and Aichi, 
 and after investigating local circumstances draw up the central 
 government's guidelines.\n\n\n\nJapanese Government Running Denialist 
 Campaign Over Dangers O Fukushima-Presentation At 11/4/17 Workers 
 International Solidarity Rally\n\n I would like to thank all those who have 
 gathered here at the November 4th Workers International Solidarity Rally. 
 My name is Sachihiko Fuse, and I am the hospital director at the Fukushima 
 Collaborative Clinic. I provide clinical care in Fukushima prefecture, the 
 location of the calamitous Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster, which 
 started on March 11th, 2011.\n\n \nThe Fukushima nuclear power plant 
 experienced full meltdowns at three reactors. It is the worst nuclear 
 catastrophe in history exceeding Chernobyl and Three Mile accidents. 
 Abolish nuclear power plants immediately!—this is the duty for Japanese 
 working class, and at the same time the common struggle of all workers in 
 the whole world.\n\n \nI would like to introduce our clinic and explain the 
 factors leading up to its establishment.\n\n \nAfter the nuclear disaster, 
 the central government, the Fukushima prefectural government and 
 authoritarian medical industry have been leading a denialist campaign: 
 “there is no need to be concerned about radiation”. Under such 
 pressure, residents of the area were concerned about the negative health 
 effects deriving from nuclear contamination, and were refused care at 
 medical facilities all around the prefecture with the reasoning that 
 “there is no need to be concerned about radiation”. Almost no medical 
 facility was available for medical consultation about health problem from 
 radioactive contamination. That was when residents of Fukushima who were 
 concerned about nuclear contamination-related health issues, as well as 
 volunteer doctors from around the countries began to solicit donations 
 nationally and from around the world to establish a medical institution 
 that operated with the understanding that “internal and low levels of 
 radiation exposure were dangerous”. We received assistance not only in 
 Japan, but also from Korea, Germany, America and the wider world and were 
 able to open our clinic on December 1st, 2012. In that sense, this clinic 
 is a crystallization of international solidarity by workers globally. I 
 would like to first thank the workers of the world for their support.\n\n 
 \nOur clinic provides care under the principles of “refuge, recuperation 
 and care”.\n\n \nFukushima is a radioactively contaminated area and its 
 residents should evacuate. That’s why the first principle is 
 “refuge”.\n\n \nHowever, there are a lot of people who can’t evacuate 
 from Fukushima. For those people, recuperating in an area without the 
 effects of radiation can reduce the health risks from radiation. That’s 
 why the second principle is “recuperation”.\n\n \nEven now, many 
 residents of the prefecture live in radioactively contaminated zones. Our 
 clinic provides care to protect the health of those who have no choice but 
 to live here. That’s why the third principle is “care”.\n\n \nNext, I 
 will discuss problems that are affecting Fukushima.\n\n \nThe biggest 
 problem is the outbreak of childhood thyroid cancer.\n\n \nCurrently, even 
 in official prefecture figures, 194 people are confirmed or suspected of 
 having contracted thyroid cancer, and 154 have been verified to have it via 
 surgery. The UNSCEAR (United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of 
 Atomic Radiation), Fukushima prefecture and the Japanese government have 
 stated that it “would be unlikely that these cases are due to the effects 
 of radiation”. However, the incidence of childhood thyroid cancer is 
 usually 1 to 2 people in 1 million. In Fukushima prefecture, we have an 
 incidence of 2 in 3,000 people. One can only conclude that these are the 
 same effects of radiation the world saw after the Chernobyl nuclear 
 accident. On top of it, the Japanese government has openly started to 
 reduce and dismantle the health survey of childhood thyroid cancer. This is 
 the international cover up radiation damage. We can never allow such a 
 crime.\n\n \nThe second problem is the state’s policy of forced 
 radioactive exposure and the abandonment of residents under the pretense of 
 reconstruction.\n\n \nThe state has been returning residents to areas 
 around Fukushima Daiichi, where an accident could again occur at any 
 moment, highly contaminated regions that have an annual radiation 
 measurement of up to 20 mSv (milli-sievert). They have cut the housing 
 reimbursement allowance as of March of this year for those who have fled 
 outside the prefecture. TEPCO (Toden) will also eliminate psychological 
 compensation allowances for residents in shelter as of March. They are 
 trying to drive these residents into economic distress, force them to 
 return to their land and expose them to radiation. These are the 
 abandonment policies of the state under the name of “reconstruction” 
 and “return”. Fukushima Collaborative Clinic is fighting together with 
 residents who are struggling not to return.\n\n \nIt’s not just childhood 
 thyroid cancer; other negative health effects are occurring, and problems 
 like: radioactive water is being pumped out into the sea, plant workers and 
 other disaster relief workers being forced into radioactive exposure, and 
 the state attempting to indefinitely preserve radioactively contaminated 
 materials in earthwork “intermediary storage facilities”.\n\n \nNext, I 
 will report on our 5 years of activity after our establishment as a 
 clinic.\n\n \nFirst is our provision of ultrasonic examination for thyroid 
 cancer. Due to the outbreak of thyroid cancer owing to radiation exposure, 
 we have provided these examinations for 3,000 children and adults.\n\n 
 \nSecond is our activity to protect the health of residents that have 
 evacuated. We have provided health consultations for residents living in 
 temporary housing who have evacuated to these facilities in the wake of the 
 tsunami and subsequent radiation contamination.\n\n \nThird is our activity 
 to protect the health of plant and decontamination workers. Plant workers 
 are working even now to clean up after the nuclear plant disaster. There 
 are also many workers performing radiation decontamination within the 
 prefecture. Their work necessarily exposes them to radiation, but without 
 their efforts, the livelihoods of the people of Fukushima could not be 
 secured. Protecting their health is also an important part of our work at 
 the clinic.\n\n \nFourth is our lecturing activity around the country. 
 These lectures are important activity to abolish all nuclear plants and 
 prevent a second Fukushima disaster.\n\nWe have also been working in 
 solidarity with doctors fighting against nuclear power around the world 
 since the outbreak of the nuclear catastrophe. Since 2015, we have had 
 participating by anti-nuclear doctors from Korea, and messages of 
 solidarity from the German branch of IPPNW (International Physicians for 
 the Prevention of Nuclear War). We were invited and I participated in a 
 Korean anti-nuclear international symposium held in the South Korean 
 National Assembly building on January 18th of this year.\n\n \nFifth is our 
 support for evacuees both in and outside of Fukushima prefecture. Not only 
 in the prefecture, we have supported refugees by collecting signatures 
 nationally against the policy of forced exposure to radiation and the 
 return of residents. We have collected over 40,000 at this point. This 
 petition work is a sign of rebellion from Fukushima.\n\n \nWhy does the 
 state insist that “there was no accident at Fukushima”. The Abe 
 administration has paved the way for War Laws, the Secret Protection Act 
 and Conspiracy Laws.  \n\nＴｈｅ nation’s rage also continues to 
 explode at the many payoff scandals. Faced with such political crisis, 
 Shinzo Abe called a snap Lower House election to destroy the war renouncing 
 current constitution and change Japan into a military state capable of 
 waging war.\n\nWar in the modern era is nuclear war. To have nuclear 
 weapons you need nuclear plants—nuclear technology. That’s why the 
 state is on the offense with “there was no accident at 
 Fukushima”.\n\nThe Fukushima Collaborative Clinic is raising its voice 
 and reporting on health problems arising from radiation exposure, and 
 demanding answers on how many decades, how many hundreds of years it will 
 take to clean up from this accident, as well as placing the responsibility 
 where it lies: the state, and TEPCO.\n\nThis clinic alone cannot unseat the 
 Abe administration. We need worker unions like the Korean Confederation of 
 Trade Unions here in Japan. The November 5th worker rally is the starting 
 point for an authentic revival of fighting labor unions amid the collapse 
 of the Rengo federation.\n\nLet’s learn from the Korean people’s 
 uprising, which defeated Park Geun-hye and create a labor union that fights 
 with the Fukushima rebellion (Shut down all nuclear plants 
 now!).\n\nLet’s stop the Tokyo Olympics and defeat Abe who will alter the 
 constitution and bring war to Korea.\n\nLet’s abolish war and nuclear 
 power from the earth with the power of workers internationally. Let’s 
 build a world for us workers with the power of the international solidarity 
 of militant unions.\n\n \n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/11/07/18804266.php
SUMMARY:Rally at Japan Consulate in SF
LOCATION:Japanese Consulate\n275 Battery St near California\nSan Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/11/07/18804266.php
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