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DESCRIPTION:5/11/19  SF Speak Out At Japan Consulate To Stop Restarting of Japanese 
 NUKE Plants, Defense of Fukushima Children and Families And Against Abe Gov 
 Cover-up & Olympics In Fukushima and Japan\nStop PM Abe’s  Big LIE and 
 Fraud On The People Of The World That Fukushima is SAFE!\n\nSaturday May 
 11, 2019   3:00 PM \nSan Francisco Japanese Consulate \n275 Battery St near 
 California St. \nSan Francisco \n\nJoin No Nukes Action NNA  on it’s 80th 
 action at the San Francisco Japanese Consulate to protest the continued 
 Japanese Abe government to force Japanese children and their families back 
 to Fukushima. The government claims that Fukushima has been 
 “decontaminated” but the three reactors still have melted nuclear rods 
 which they have not been able to remove. In addition that is over 1 million 
 tons of contaminated radioactive tritium water in thousands of tanks 
 surrounding the broken nuclear plants in Fukushima. The government is 
 pushing to release the water in the Pacific Ocean despite the opposition of 
 fisherman associations and the public.\nThere are also thousands of bags in 
 Fukushima filled with radioactive waste with no place to go and these bags 
 are spread throughout the region making it a major health danger.\n\nIn a 
 major propaganda scheme to lie to the world, the Abe government has lied to 
 the Olympic committee that not only is Japan safe but Fukushima should host 
 the baseball games and special Olympics. It is spending tens of millions of 
 dollars preparing the Azuma sports stadium to push a big lie that 
 everything is OK.\n\n They continue to claim despite evidence to the 
 contrary that the  Fukushima problem had been solved and that it was 
 “decontaminated” and ready for the Olympics. This is was an overt 
 brazen lie and falsification of the real situation and show the real 
 political charter of the Abe government. The government also plans to bring 
 in immigrant workers as contract laborers and use them for the clean-up 
 without proper training and safety.\nAt the same time,  there is an 
 increase in the amount of cesium in the waters around Fukushima nearly 
 eight years after the explosion of the nuclear plants and contamination of 
 Fukushima, Japan, and the world. The Abe government is also pushing for 
 militarization and removal of Article 9 of the Japanese Constitution that 
 prevents military interventions outside Japan. They are also pushing for a 
 new US military base in Okinawa despite the opposition of the mass of 
 Okinawan people and the governor. This base would also have US nuclear 
 ships and weapons which is presently against the US-Japan Security 
 Agreement. The US has already violated this agreement many times and used 
 Okinawa as a base for illegal wars around the world.\nThe majority of 
 Japanese people are opposed to restarting Japan’s nuclear plants 
 including the previous 3 prime ministers who are worried that Japan would 
 be destroyed with another disaster like Fukushima.  Again this shows that 
 the Abe government has contempt for the people it supposedly represents. 
 Join the rally and speak out. \n\nDefend the people of Fukushima, Japan and 
 the world. \nStop The Restart of ALL Japan NUKE Plants\nDefend the Children 
 and People of Fukushima\nNo Olympic Baseball Games at Fukushima and 
 Olympics in Japan\nNo Militarization and War In Asia\n\nFor more event 
 information: \nhttp://nonukesaction.wordpress.com \n\nAlso on May 26th in 
 Berkeley, California\n\nThe Olympics In Fukushima, Corruption, Lies & A 
 Danger To The World\nSpecial Screening Of “Another Nightmare In Fukushima 
 And The 2020 Olympics In Japan”\nBy the Labor Video Project\n& 
 Presentation by Olympics expert and professor George Wright\n\nSunday, May 
 26 at 1:30 PM \nBerkeley Main Library \n2090 Kittredge St, Berkeley, CA 
 94704\nFree Screening and Presentation by No Nukes Action NNA\n\nFor more 
 event information: \nhttp://nonukesaction.wordpress.com \n\nAbe's Fukushima 
 'under control' pledge to secure Olympics was a lie: former 
 PM\nhttps://www.reuters.com/article/us-japan-nuclear-idUSKCN11D0UF\n\n\nTOKYO 
 (Reuters) - Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s promise that the 
 crippled Fukushima nuclear plant was “under control” in his successful 
 pitch three years ago for Tokyo to host the 2020 Olympic Games “was a 
 lie”, former premier Junichiro Koizumi said on Wednesday. \n\nJunichiro 
 Koizumi (R), former Japanese prime minister and a supporter of former 
 Japanese premier Morihiro Hosokawa (L), a candidate of Tokyo gubernatorial 
 election, speaks to voters atop a van while campaigning for the February 9 
 vote in front of Tokyo Metropolitan governmental building in Tokyo January 
 23, 2014. REUTERS/Yuya Shino \nKoizumi, one of Japan’s most popular 
 premiers during his 2001-2006 term, became an outspoken critic of nuclear 
 energy after a March 2011 earthquake and tsunami triggered meltdowns at 
 Tokyo Electric Power Co’s (Tepco) Fukushima Daiichi plant, the worst 
 nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in 1986. \n\nAbe 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. 
 \n\n“Mr. Abe’s ‘under control’ remark, that was a lie,” Koizumi, 
 now 74 and his unruly mane of hair turned white, told a news conference 
 where he repeated his opposition to nuclear power. \n\n\n“It is not under 
 control,” Koizumi added, citing as an example Tepco’s widely questioned 
 efforts to build the world’s biggest “ice wall” to keep groundwater 
 from flowing into the basements of the damaged reactors and getting 
 contaminated. \n\n“They keep saying they can do it, but they can’t,” 
 Koizumi said. Experts say handling the nearly million tonnes of radioactive 
 water stored in tanks on the Fukushima site is one of the biggest 
 challenges. \n\nKoizumi also said he was “ashamed” that he had believed 
 experts who assured him that nuclear power was cheap, clean and safe and 
 that resource-poor Japan had to rely on nuclear energy. \n\nAfter the 
 Fukushima crisis, Koizumi said, “I studied the process, reality and 
 history of the introduction of nuclear power and became ashamed of myself 
 for believing such lies.” \n\nAll Japan’s nuclear plants - which had 
 supplied about 30 percent of its electricity - were closed after the 
 Fukushima disaster and utilities have struggled to get running again in the 
 face of a skeptical public. Only three are operating now. \n\nAbe’s 
 government has set a target for nuclear power to supply a fifth of energy 
 generation by 2030. \n\nThe meltdowns in three Fukushima reactors spewed 
 radiation over a wide area of the countryside, contaminating water, food 
 and air. More than 160,000 people were evacuated from nearby towns.\n\n\n4 
 nuclear fuel rods removed from crippled Fukushima nuclear plant for 1st 
 time\n\n\nApril 16, 2019 (Mainichi Japan)\nJapanese 
 version\n\n\nhttps://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20190416/p2a/00m/0na/003000\nIn 
 this photo provided by TEPCO, a special crane removes nuclear fuel in a 
 pool for spent fuel at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station on April 
 15, 2019.\nThe operator of the crippled Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power 
 Station on April 15 successfully removed four nuclear fuel rods each 
 weighing about 250 kilograms from a pool for spent fuel at the nuclear 
 plant's No. 3 reactor.\n\n【Related】TEPCO begins fuel removal at 
 Fukushima plant No. 3 unit pool\n【Related】Unclear debris map casts 
 shadow over decommissioning of Fukushima plant\n【Related】Treated water 
 at Fukushima nuclear plant still radioactive\nIt was the first time for 
 Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings Inc. (TEPCO) to remove fuel rods from 
 a damaged reactor following the March 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and 
 tsunami, which triggered meltdowns at the plant's No. 1 to 3 
 reactors.\n\nOriginally, the government planned for the work at the plant 
 in the northeastern Japan prefecture of Fukushima to begin at the end of 
 2014, but trouble with equipment caused significant delays, pushing the 
 work back by 4 years and 4 months.\n\nSince the meltdowns, TEPCO has 
 continued to cool 566 fuel rods -- 514 used and 52 unused -- on the upper 
 level of the building housing the No. 3 reactor. The building was damaged 
 by a hydrogen explosion during the nuclear disaster, and removal of the 
 fuel rods has remained an urgent task.\n\nWorkers started the removal work 
 at the No. 3 reactor shortly before 9 a.m. on April 15. The level of 
 radiation around the pool for spent fuel remains high, approaching as much 
 as 1 millisievert per hour, so the task was carried out remotely. Four 
 rectangular rods, each 4 meters in length and weighing about 250 kilograms, 
 were lifted up using a special crane, and carried through the water to a 
 steel container about 10 meters away in a process that took about one 
 hour.\n\nAt one point, a handle attached to the top of one of the fuel rods 
 got caught on the crane's claws, causing the operation to be suspended for 
 about 20 minutes. But after around nine hours, the four fuel rods had been 
 contained. The crane then lifted the container onto a truck outside the 
 reactor building. This removed fuel will be temporarily placed in a pool on 
 the grounds of the nuclear plant.\n\nThe process will be repeated, and 
 officials hope to remove all fuel rods from the pool by fiscal 
 2020.\n\nSince August last year, delays have occurred in the work at the 
 No. 3 reactor as checks of the performance of equipment uncovered cable 
 insulation and crane problems.\n\nWhen the meltdowns first occurred, there 
 was no technology in Japan to remotely remove the fuel rods, so officials 
 decided to use equipment brought in from overseas, but repeated problems 
 ensued. Akira Ono, head of the decommissioning project at the plant, said 
 he is not thinking of using the same equipment at the plant's other 
 crippled reactors. Work to remove fuel from the buildings of the No. 1 and 
 No. 2 reactors is slated to begin as early as fiscal 2023.\n\n(Japanese 
 original by Toshiyuki Suzuki, Science & Environment News 
 Department)\n\n\nInternational Campaign\n\n“Tokyo 2020 - The Radioactive 
 Olympics”\n\nhttps://globalethics.files.wordpress.com/2018/07/ippnw-2018-07-11-tokyo-2020-the-radioactive-olympics-en.pdf\n\n\nIn 
 2020, Japan is inviting athletes from around the world to take part in the 
 Tokyo Olympic Games. We are hoping for the games to be fair and peaceful. 
 At the same time, we are worried about plans to host baseball and softball 
 competitions in Fukushima City, just 50 km away from the ruins of the 
 Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant. It was here, in 2011, that multiple 
 nuclear meltdowns took place, spreading radioactivity across Japan and the 
 Pacific Ocean - a catastrophe comparable only to the nuclear meltdown of 
 Chernobyl.\n\nThe ecological and social consequences of this catastrophe 
 can be seen everywhere in the country: whole families uprooted from their 
 ancestral homes, deserted evacuation zones, hundreds of thousands of bags 
 of irradiated soil dumped all over the country, contaminated forests, 
 rivers and lakes. Normality has not returned to Japan.\n\nThe reactors 
 continue to be a radiation hazard as further catastrophes could occur at 
 any time. Every day adds more radioactive contamination to the ocean, air 
 and soil. Enormous amounts of radioactive waste are stored on the premises 
 of the power plant in the open air. Should there be another earthquake, 
 these would pose a grave danger to the population and the environment. The 
 nuclear catastrophe continues today.\n\nOn the occasion of the Olympic 
 Games 2020, we are planning an international campaign. Our concern is that 
 athletes and visitors to the games could be harmed by the radioactive 
 contamination in the region, especially those people more vulnerable to 
 radiation, children and pregnant women.\n\nAccording to official Japanese 
 government estimates, the Olympic Games will cost more than the equivalent 
 of 12 billion Euros. At the same time, the Japanese government is 
 threatening to cut support to all evacuees who are unwilling to return to 
 the region.\n\nInternational regulations limit the permitted dose for the 
 general public of additional radiation following a nuclear accident to 1 
 mSv per year. In areas where evacuation orders were recently lifted, the 
 returning population will be exposed to levels up to 20 mSv per year. Even 
 places that have undergone extensive decontamination efforts could be 
 recontaminated at any time by unfavourable weather conditions, as mountains 
 and forests serve as a continuous depot for radioactive particles.\n\nOur 
 campaign will focus on educating the public about the dangers of the 
 nuclear industry. We will explain what health threats the Japanese 
 population was and is exposed to today. Even during normal operations, 
 nuclear power plants pose a threat to public health – especially to 
 infants and unborn children.\n\nThere is still no safe permanent depository 
 site for the toxic inheritance of the nuclear industry anywhere on earth, 
 that is a fact.\n\n\nTEPCO plans to use new foreign workers at Fukushima 
 plant\nhttp://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/AJ201904180027.html\nBy MIKI AOKI/ 
 Staff Writer\nApril 18, 2019 at 14:20 JST\n\n\nRows of storage tanks hold 
 radiation-contaminated water on the grounds of the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear 
 power plant. (Asahi Shimbun file photo)\nTokyo Electric Power Co. plans to 
 use the new visa program to deploy foreign workers to its crippled 
 Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant, sparking concerns that language barriers 
 could cause safety hazards and accidents.\n\nThe specified skills visa 
 program started in April to alleviate labor shortages in 14 different 
 industrial sectors. TEPCO says it has long lacked enough workers for 
 decommissioning work at the Fukushima nuclear plant.\n\nAt a March 28 
 meeting, the utility explained its plan to hire foreign workers to dozens 
 of construction and other companies that have been contracted for 
 decommissioning work.\n\nTEPCO officials asked the companies to be aware 
 that workers sent to radiation monitoring zones must wear dosimeters and 
 receive special education about the dangers they will face.\n\nThe new work 
 visa program requires the foreign workers to have a minimum level of 
 Japanese language ability needed for daily life.\n\nBut TEPCO officials 
 reminded the company representatives that Japanese language skills would be 
 even more important at the Fukushima plant because of the need to 
 accurately understand radiation levels and follow instructions by superiors 
 and colleagues regarding work safety.\n\nTEPCO officials said they would 
 ask the contracting companies to check on the Japanese language skills of 
 prospective foreign workers.\n\nBut at least one construction company has 
 already decided not to hire any foreign workers.\n\n"The work rules at the 
 No. 1 plant are very complicated,” said a construction company employee 
 who has worked at the Fukushima plant. “I am also worried about whether 
 thorough education can be conducted on radiation matters. It would be 
 frightening if an accident occurred due to a failure of 
 communication.”\n\nAccording to TEPCO officials, an average of about 
 4,000 people work at the nuclear plant each day, mostly in zones where 
 radiation levels must be constantly monitored.\n\nTo stay within the legal 
 limits on exposure levels, workers often have to be replaced, leading to 
 difficulties for TEPCO in gathering the needed number of 
 workers.\n\nBetween April 2018 and February this year, 11,109 people worked 
 at the Fukushima plant. Of that number, 763 were found to have levels of 
 radiation exposure between 10 and 20 millisieverts, while 888 had levels 
 between 5 and 10 millisieverts.\n\nThe legal limit for radiation exposure 
 for workers at nuclear plants is 50 millisieverts a year, and 100 
 millisieverts over a five-year period.\n\nThe Justice Ministry has 
 disciplined companies that used technical intern trainees for 
 decontamination work without adequately informing them of the dangers. The 
 ministry has also clearly stated that such trainees are prohibited from 
 doing decommissioning work at the Fukushima plant.\n\nHowever, Justice 
 Ministry officials told TEPCO that foreigners with the new visa status 
 could work alongside Japanese staff at the nuclear plant.\n\nAlthough their 
 numbers are small, foreign workers and engineers have been accepted at the 
 Fukushima plant. As of February, 29 foreigners had been registered as 
 workers engaged in jobs that expose them to radiation.\n\nA construction 
 company official said such foreign workers were hired after their Japanese 
 language ability was confirmed.\n\nBut concerns remain on whether the new 
 foreign workers will be able to properly understand how much radiation 
 exposure they have experienced.\n\n“Even Japanese workers are not sure 
 about how to apply for workers’ compensation due to radiation 
 exposure,” said Minoru Ikeda, 66, who has published a book about his 
 experiences in decommissioning work at the Fukushima plant until 2015. 
 “The problem would only be exacerbated for foreign workers.”\n\nKazumi 
 Takagi, a sociology professor at Gifu University, has conducted interviews 
 with nuclear plant workers.\n\nNoting the need for special protective gear 
 to work at the Fukushima site, Takagi said: “Unless workers can instantly 
 understand the language when minor mistakes or sudden problems occur, it 
 could lead to a major accident. That, in turn, could cause major delays in 
 the work.”\n\n\nANTI-KOREAN RACISM ON THE RISE IN JAPAN, FILMMAKER 
 SAYS\n\nHTTPS://WWW.UPI.COM/TOP_NEWS/WORLD-NEWS/2019/04/17/ANTI-KOREAN-RACISM-ON-THE-RISE-IN-JAPAN-FILMMAKER-SAYS/5661555477281/\n\nAPRIL 
 17, 2019 / 7:37 AM\nByElizabeth Shim\n (1)\n\nAnti-Korean hate speech 
 followed the release of a documentary about comfort women in Japan, 
 according to the filmmakers. The movie is being screened in the United 
 States this week at select educational institutions. File Photo by Kimimasa 
 Mayama/EPA\n\nNEW YORK, April 17 (UPI) -- Hate speech targeting ethnic 
 Koreans is escalating in Japan as the administration of Prime Minister 
 Shinzo Abe has pushed back on issuing a formal apology to comfort women, a 
 Korean-Japanese documentary producer said.\n\nMaeui Park, a 
 third-generation "Zainichi" Korean filmmaker, and her mother, Soonam Park, 
 have chronicled the lives of Korean women raped at comfort stations in 
 wartime Japan. Maeui Park told UPI on Tuesday the government is getting 
 away with denying responsibility for the recruitment of teenage Korean 
 girls into the military.\n\n"The government is saying the comfort women 
 were never sex slaves," she said. "Even the press, television networks and 
 newspapers, all say the same thing. They're shifting the blame to 
 Korea."\n\nPark's assessment of the political climate in Japan is a sign of 
 steadily deteriorating ties. In 1993, Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Yohei 
 Kono acknowledged the coercion of Korean women into military or state-run 
 brothels. A change of policy, and a diminished sense of accountability in 
 2019, could be a sign Tokyo is doubling down on revisionist 
 history.\n\n"Right now in Japanese society they're glorifying the wartime 
 past instead of admitting faults," Park said, adding the general public is 
 becoming less aware of Japanese wrongdoing during World War II.\n\nJapan's 
 approach to Korean issues receives support from long-held prejudices 
 against Koreans, or Japanese racism that promotes the idea Koreans are 
 "racially inferior," Park said.\n\nPark is in the United States for the 
 screening of her mother's documentary, Silence, a vivid film about comfort 
 women activism in Japan that includes footage taken across three decades. 
 On Tuesday the film was shown at the Borough of Manhattan Community 
 College's Tribeca Performing Arts Center.\n\nThe film includes scores of 
 interviews with comfort women who have since died. It is a collection of 
 searing firsthand testimonies about the brutal conditions of daily sexual 
 assault and physical beatings the women endured as teenagers.\n\nThe 
 documentary has been attacked in Japan, Soonam Park says in the final 
 scenes of the film, where she says Japanese right-wing activists have 
 called for the "killing of Koreans" who "smell like garlic," a Japanese 
 reference to Korean food.\n\nPlight of Zainichi Koreans\nPark, who was born 
 to Korean migrants to Japan in 1935, attended a pro-North Korean school in 
 Japan. Maeui Park said her mother attended the school because there were no 
 South Korean schools at the time.\n\nRELATED South Korean man arrested for 
 killing five people fleeing a building he set on fire\n\nSoonam Park's 
 family history reflects the conflicting loyalties of the Korean population 
 in postwar Japan, following the division of Korea into North and South. 
 Maeui Park says her mother's younger sister chose to be repatriated to 
 North Korea in the '60s, when the Japanese government was encouraging 
 ethnic Koreans to leave the country.\n\n"About 100,000 [Zainichi] people 
 went, and [my aunt] went by herself," Park said, adding there has been "no 
 news" from her relative.\n\nSoonam Park, who opted for South Korean 
 citizenship in order to travel to the South for her filmmaking, cannot 
 visit the North, Maeui Park added.\n\nAs filmmakers, the Parks have instead 
 adopted a family of outspoken comfort women -- activists who broke a 
 decades-long silence to come forward about their painful 
 experiences.\n\nLee Ok-seon, a former comfort woman who has said she was 
 abducted to a rape station in Manchuria when she was 16, is one of the 
 activists in the film with a close relationship to Soonam Park.\n\nLee, who 
 survived "horrific" rapes daily before returning to Korea to raise five 
 stepchildren, is shown in the film zipping around in her motorized 
 wheelchair in the rural village she calls home.\n\nLee says in the film her 
 greatest regret is her inability to bear children owing to the damage to 
 her uterus after countless sexual assaults.\n\nThe former comfort woman may 
 have been one of the luckier survivors, however; other women in the film 
 say they witnessed dying girls "gushing blood at the mouth" after illnesses 
 were left untreated.\n\nPast and present Japanese government officials 
 have, at times, dismissed the women as paid prostitutes. The women deny 
 this in the film.\n\n"They were just little girls," they said. "What would 
 they know about prostitution?"\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/05/06/18823258.php
SUMMARY:Stop Restarting of Japanese Nuke Plants & Olympics In Fukushima
LOCATION:San Francisco Japanese Consulate\n275 Battery St. near California\nSan 
 Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/05/06/18823258.php
DTSTART:20190511T220000Z
DTEND:20190511T230000Z
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