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DESCRIPTION:8/11/19  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\nOn The Anniversary of The 
 Bombing of Hiroshima\n\nStop PM Abe’s  Big LIE and Fraud On The People Of 
 The World That Fukushima is SAFE!\n\nSunday August 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 83nd action at the San 
 Francisco Japanese Consulate to protest the continued Japanese Abe 
 government to force Japanese children and their families back to Fukushima. 
 \n\nThe  continued efforts by the Japanese Abe government to demand  that 
 Fukushima  families and their children  return to Fukushima or face the 
 loss of their housing subsidies must be opposed. The Abe government is on 
 an international full press effort to whitewash the cover-up of the 
 Fukushima disaster by having the baseball games at contaminated Fukushima. 
 This is while there  is over 1 million tons of radioactive tritium 
 contaminated water in tanks  surrounding the broken nuclear power plants. 
 They have still failed removed the melted nuclear rods in the reactors 
 after more than eight years  and  there are thousands of bags  of 
 radioactive waste spread throughout Fukushima with no place to go.\n\nThe 
 No Nukes Action Committee is  calling for  halt to the restarting of all 
 nuclear power plants and is opposing the re-militarization of Japan by 
 abolishing Article 9 of the Japanese constitution which forbids military 
 wars abroad. The government has also  passed a secrecy law  and  conspiracy 
 law  to intimidate journalists and independent  investigators from. 
 exposing the continuing dangers at Fukushima.\n\nRightwing xeonphobic 
 nationalists are also terrorizing artists who are exposing the history of  
 Imperial Japan and the use of Comfort Women by the military. The rise of 
 nationalism,   racism and xenophobia must be oposed by all.\n\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\nSymbol of failure in 
 dealing with Fukushima crisis to be 
 demolished\nhttp://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/AJ201907300032.html\nBy 
 NORIYOSHI OHTSUKI/ Senior Staff Writer\nJuly 30, 2019 at 15:10 
 JST\n\n\n\nPhoto/Illutration\nThis second floor room at the off-site center 
 was used for meetings among the various officials based there to deal with 
 the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster. (Shigetaka 
 Kodama)\nPhoto/Illustraion\n\nAn abandoned two-story building in Okuma, 
 Fukushima Prefecture, with overgrown weeds symbolizes the government's 
 overconfidence and failure in dealing with a nuclear power plant 
 emergency.\n\nThis off-site emergency center for the Fukushima No. 1 
 nuclear power plant, located about 5 kilometers southwest of the crippled 
 facility, appears headed for demolition by April 2020.\n\nThe government 
 seemingly would like to erase this embarrassing reminder of its ineptitude 
 in handling the 2011 nuclear disaster.\n\nThe crisis center was to serve as 
 a base of operations for central and local government officials, as well as 
 those at Tokyo Electric Power Co. in charge of the nuclear plant, in the 
 event of a major accident striking the plant.\n\nHowever, the lack of 
 adequate measures to ensure airtightness in the facility led to its 
 abandonment four days after the Great East Japan Earthquake and tsunami 
 inundated the Fukushima No. 1 plant and crippled its cooling 
 systems.\n\nAnd while the 150 or so individuals who had gathered at the 
 off-site center were swiftly evacuated to a safer location, the same did 
 not occur for the 90 or so patients at Futaba Hospital, located about 1 
 kilometer away.\n\nOfficials in charge of dealing with the nuclear disaster 
 left the evacuation of patients up to the Self-Defense Forces, but delays 
 and other factors led to the eventual deaths of about 50 of those patients, 
 either while still at the hospital, en route to an evacuation site or later 
 at the gymnasium where the patients were evacuated to.\n\nMost of Okuma was 
 initially classified by the central government as a "difficult-to-return" 
 zone because of high radiation levels. But decontamination efforts were 
 implemented in the central part of the town to turn it into a base for 
 rebuilding and resuscitation of the community. The plan is to lift the 
 evacuation order for that base in the spring of 2022.\n\nThe off-site 
 center is situated within that base area and Okuma town officials had asked 
 the central government, which owns the building housing the off-site 
 center, and the Fukushima prefectural government, which manages the 
 building, to demolish it to allow for construction of a residential 
 district in the area.\n\nThe local office of the Environment Ministry plans 
 to complete demolition of the building by the end of the current fiscal 
 year. Some items from the building that are considered worthy of 
 preservation will be removed to another exhibition facility now under 
 construction.\n\nHowever, one expert criticized the move to simply erase 
 what could be considered a blot on the government's handling of the nuclear 
 disaster.\n\nNaoya Sekiya, an associate professor at the Center for 
 Integrated Disaster Information Research at the University of Tokyo, 
 touched upon the fact that off-site centers around Japan were constructed 
 after the 1999 nuclear criticality accident at the JCO Co.'s 
 uranium-processing plant in Tokai, Ibaraki Prefecture, which killed two 
 workers and exposed hundreds of residents to high levels of 
 radiation.\n\n"While I can understand the need for the town to rebuild, the 
 off-site center serves as a symbol that conveys how optimistic were the 
 expectations about nuclear disasters even in the wake of the JCO accident," 
 Sekiya said. "Demolishing the building appears to be an attempt to erase 
 that lesson and is not helpful in terms of thinking about preventing future 
 accidents at nuclear plants."\n\nSEVEN YEARS LATER\n\nThe off-site center 
 was visited on June 25 to observe the interior as well as such facilities 
 as the shower room that employees exposed to radiation used before 
 re-entering the building.\n\nThe doors on the building were similar to 
 those found at most commercial buildings. The center served as a base of 
 operations for 150 officials from the economy and science ministries, the 
 SDF, the Fukushima prefectural government and TEPCO soon after the March 
 11, 2011, nuclear disaster.\n\nBut blackouts and disconnecting of 
 communications channels meant officials at the off-site center could 
 neither collect or transmit information about the fast-developing nuclear 
 disaster.\n\nMoreover, radiation levels within the building reached 200 
 microsieverts per hour, more than 50 times the level at which evacuation 
 orders are issued. On March 15, 2011, all officials at the off-site center 
 were evacuated.\n\nThe last time the off-site center was open to the media 
 was in March 2012.\n\nOn June 25, the radiation level at the entrance to 
 the building was 2 microsieverts per hour. That meant special protective 
 gear was not needed to look around the building.\n\nSeven years ago, one 
 item that caught the eye of reporters was a whiteboard that contained 
 jottings about the developing nuclear disaster.\n\nOne note said that the 
 No. 3 reactor at the Fukushima No. 1 plant had exploded. Another said that 
 48 patients remained at Futaba Hospital as of 10:50 a.m. on March 13, 2011. 
 But that last note showed just how incomplete the data gathering was 
 because at that time there were still about 90 patients at the 
 hospital.\n\nWhile a Fukushima prefectural government official said that 
 items deemed worthy of preservation had already been moved to another 
 location, there were still dozens of computers and copiers left behind in 
 the office.\n\nAlthough efforts were made to seal the windows and doors of 
 the building after the nuclear disaster, the rapid rate at which radiation 
 levels increased showed how futile such measures were.\n\n\nPRESERVING 
 LESSONS OF MISTAKES\n\nYotaro Hatamura served as chairman of the 
 government's Investigation Committee on the Accident at the Fukushima 
 Nuclear Power Stations of Tokyo Electric Power Co. He was a professor 
 emeritus at the University of Tokyo and was known for his work on the 
 "science of failure."\n\nHe said recently that the government had set aside 
 money in its budget to deal with radiation exposure, but that the former 
 Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA) "just ignored those funds 
 because it was convinced by the thinking that a nuclear accident would 
 never occur."\n\nHatamura added, however, that just preserving various 
 items and displaying them after cleaning them would not have any real 
 meaning in terms of learning lessons from the accident.\n\nDebate has 
 occurred in a number of communities over preserving relics from the 2011 
 nuclear and natural disasters to serve as monuments about what should not 
 be forgotten.\n\nIn some communities, extended discussions have been held 
 between residents about whether to preserve local government buildings 
 heavily damaged by the tsunami.\n\nHowever, Okuma town officials admitted 
 that no such forum for debate had been provided local residents regarding 
 the off-site center.\n\nOne official of the Ministry of Economy, Trade and 
 Industry who once worked at NISA said, "Since NISA no longer exists, there 
 are few bureaucrats within the ministry who want to pass on the failures 
 involved in dealing with the nuclear disaster."\n\n\nAtsushi's Poem\n\n\nMy 
 Hiroshima\n\nMom, please forgive me.\nI have to leave.\nBeing trapped under 
 the wreckage,\nyou closed your eyes, and whispered to me,\n"You must leave 
 here".\nYou were still breathing, \nkeeping the warmth \nas you have always 
 embraced me with it.\nMom, on that tragic day,\nI left you behind, under 
 the wreckage, \nand I began to walk.\nThe city was contaminated with "ashes 
 of death."\nBodies, charred black, were lying here and there.\nYet I 
 continued walking along.\n"Water, please..."\n"Water..."\nI exhausted my 
 tears, and\njust kept on walking around the dead city.\nThat tragic 
 day,\nsuch a terrible day in August.\nWhy?\nWhy am I the only survivor?\nI 
 feel the radiation that penetrated my body is alive.\nI still hear your cry 
 from deep inside my contaminated body:\n"Go, Atsushi!\nGo..., Hurry 
 up..."\nI' ll go on walking.\nI' ll go on living.\nI' ll go on walking.\nI' 
 ll go on living.\nAfter 60 years,\nI' m still going on walking and living 
 in Hiroshima.\n https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/08/08/18825297.php
SUMMARY:Rally To Stop Restarting of Japanese NUKE Plants, Defense Of Families-Children
LOCATION:San Francisco Japanese Consulate \n275 Battery St near California St. \nSan 
 Francisco 
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/08/08/18825297.php
DTSTART:20190811T220000Z
DTEND:20190811T230000Z
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