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DESCRIPTION:Rally-Speak Out On Thursday March 11, 2021 3:00 PM Rally On Tenth 
 Anniversary of Fukushima Meltdowns\nNo More Fukushimas, No Olympic In Japan 
 In the Middle Of Pandemic\nSan Francisco Japanese Consulate\n275 Battery 
 St/California\nSan Francisco\n\nSponsored by No Nukes Action\n\n\nThursday  
 March 11, 2021 is the tenth anniversary of the earthquake and meltdown of 
 three nuclear reactors at Fukushima. \nThe nightmare for the people and 
 refugees of Fukushima and Japan continues. They are struggling to survive. 
 \nDespite promises that the melted nuclear rods would be removed they have 
 not been and the recent earthquake has added greater dangers. \nTwo 
 reactors at the wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan have begun leaking 
 cooling water following last weekend's 7.3 magnitude earthquake, indicating 
 that the existing damage to TEPCO's Unit 1 and 3 reactors has worsened, 
 according to Keisuke Matsuo. \nThe government is also planning to dump over 
 a million tons of  contaminated water into the Pacific Ocean despite the 
 opposition of the Fisherman’s co-operative and the people of Japan and 
 Korea.\nAt the same time the Japanese government under former Japanese 
 prime minister Abe and now Suga continue their denialism mode. They  say 
 that they have overcome the nuke plant meltdowns and still want to have the 
  Olympics in Japan this summer in the midst of the greatest world pandemic 
 in over 100 years. \nThey also have shown their sexist attacks on women 
 when the former head of the Olympics Yoshiro who was also a former prime 
 minister said women speak too much. He was forced to\nresign but their 
 reactionary sexism, denialism and racism continues.\nNuclear clean-up 
 workers including workers from overseas and other workers continue to get 
 contaminated with no proper health and safety education and tens of 
 thousands of bags of radioactive waste continue to remain scattered 
 throughout the prefecture with no place to go.\nThe criminal negligence of 
 having the Olympics under these circumstances with a full blown pandemic 
 and a three leaking nuclear reactors is a sign of insanity and a danger to 
 not only \nJapan but the world.\nNo Nukes Action calls on all those opposed 
 to nuclear plants and weapons, against the in Tokyo and Fukushima Olympics 
 and those opposed to have this event in the middle of a pandemic to join 
 the action.\nIt it time to remember the families and children who are still 
 suffering from this man-made \ndisaster and let them know that people in 
 the United States and around the world stand with them.\n\nPhysical 
 distancing and  masks for all participants at action\n\nRally & Speak-out 
 On 10th Anniversary of Fukushima, Against the Japan Olympics In The Middle 
 Of Covid Pandemic\nThursday March 11, 2021 3PM\nSan Francisco Japanese 
 Consulate\n275 Battery St/California\nSan Francisco\nNo Nukes 
 Action\nhttp://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/\n\nWater leaks indicate new 
 damage at Fukushima nuclear 
 plant\n\nhttps://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20210220/p2g/00m/0na/011000\nFebruary 
 20, 2021 (Mainichi Japan)\n\nFukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in 
 Fukushima Prefecture is seen in this photo taken on Feb. 14, 2019. 
 (Mainichi)\nTOKYO (AP) -- Cooling water levels have fallen in two reactors 
 at the wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant since a powerful earthquake hit the 
 area last weekend, indicating possible additional damage, its operator said 
 Friday.\n\nNew damage could further complicate the plant's already 
 difficult decommissioning process, which is expected to take decades. 
 \n\nTokyo Electric Power Co. spokesman Keisuke Matsuo said the drop in 
 water levels in the Unit 1 and 3 reactors indicates that the existing 
 damage to their primary containment chambers was worsened by Saturday's 
 magnitude 7.3 quake, allowing more water to leak. \n\nThe leaked water is 
 believed to have remained inside the reactor buildings and there is no sign 
 of any outside impact, he said. \n\nIn 2011, a powerful magnitude 9.1 
 earthquake and tsunami damaged the Fukushima plant's cooling systems, 
 causing three reactor cores to melt and nuclear fuel to fall to the bottom 
 of their primary containment vessels. \n\nTEPCO will monitor the water and 
 temperatures at the bottom of the containment vessels, Matsuo said. 
 \n\nSince the 2011 disaster, cooling water has been escaping constantly 
 from the damaged primary containment vessels into the basements of the 
 reactor buildings. To make up for the loss, additional cooling water has 
 been pumped into the reactors to cool the melted fuel remaining inside 
 them. The recent decline in the water levels indicates that more water than 
 before is leaking out, TEPCO said.\n\nMore than 180 people received mostly 
 minor injuries from Saturday's earthquake, according to the Fire and 
 Disaster Management Agency. The quake also triggered landslides, damaged 
 homes and a high-speed train line, and caused widespread power and water 
 supply disruptions.\n\nTEPCO initially reported that there was no 
 abnormality at the plant from Saturday's quake. \n\nMatsuo said the cooling 
 water level fell as much as 70 centimeters (27 inches) in the primary 
 containment chamber of the Unit 1 reactor and about 30 centimeters (11 
 inches) in Unit 3. TEPCO wasn't able to determine any decline in Unit 2 
 because indicators have been taken out to prepare for the removal of melted 
 debris, it said. \n\nIncreased leakage could require more cooling water to 
 be pumped into the reactors, which would result in more contaminated water 
 that is treated and stored in huge tanks at the plant. TEPCO says its 
 storage capacity of 1.37 million tons will be full next summer. A 
 government panel's recommendation that it be gradually released into the 
 sea has faced fierce opposition from local residents and a decision is 
 still pending.\n\nMeanwhile, the Tokyo High Court on Friday held the 
 government as well as TEPCO accountable for the 2011 nuclear disaster, 
 ordering both to pay about 280 million yen ($2.6 million) in compensation 
 to more than 40 plaintiffs forced to evacuate to Chiba, near Tokyo, for 
 their lost livelihoods and homes.\n\nFriday's decision reverses an earlier 
 ruling by the Chiba district court that excluded the government from 
 responsibility. Judge Yukio Shirai said the government could have foreseen 
 the risk of a massive tsunami and taken measures after a long-term 
 assessment in 2002 of seismic activities.\n\nLawyers representing the 
 plaintiffs welcomed the decision and said it would affect other pending 
 cases. \n\n"The case raises the question of whether we should tolerate a 
 society that prioritizes economic activities over people's lives and 
 health," said Izutaro Mangi, a lawyer representing the plaintiffs.\n\nNewly 
 found Fukushima plant contamination may delay 
 cleanup\nhttp://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/14140809\nTHE ASSOCIATED 
 PRESS\nJanuary 27, 2021 at 18:10 JST\n\n\nPhoto/Illutration\nThis Jan. 31, 
 2014, image released by Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings shows the 
 aerial view of the No. 3 reactor, with its roof blown off and shield plug 
 (circle in the middle) exposed, in Okuma, Fukushima Prefecture. (AP 
 Photo)\nA draft investigation report into the 2011 Fukushima nuclear 
 meltdown, adopted by Japanese nuclear regulators Wednesday, says it has 
 detected dangerously high levels of radioactive contamination at two of the 
 three reactors, adding to concerns about decommissioning challenges.\n\nThe 
 interim report said data collected by investigators showed that the sealing 
 plugs sitting atop the No. 2 and 3 reactor containment vessels were as 
 fatally contaminated as nuclear fuel debris that had melted and fell to the 
 bottom of the reactors following the March 2011 tsunami and 
 earthquake.\n\nThe experts said the bottom of the sealed plug, a 
 triple-layered concrete disc-shaped lid 12 meters in diameter sitting atop 
 the primary containment vessel, is coated with high levels of radioactive 
 Cesium 137.\n\nThe No. 1 reactor lid was less contaminated, presumably 
 because the plug was slightly knocked out of place and disfigured due to 
 the impact of the hydrogen explosion, the report said.\n\nThe experts 
 measured radiation levels at multiple locations inside the three reactor 
 buildings, and examined how radioactive materials moved and safety 
 equipment functioned during the accident. They also said venting attempt at 
 Unit 2 to prevent reactor damage never worked, and that safety measures and 
 equipment designs still need to be examined.\n\nThe lid contamination does 
 not affect the environment as the containment vessels are enclosed inside 
 the reactor buildings. The report did not give further details about if or 
 how the lid contamination would affect the decommissioning 
 progress.\n\nNuclear Regulation Commission Chairman Toyoshi Fuketa called 
 the findings “extremely serious” and said they would make melted fuel 
 removal “more difficult.” He said figuring out how to remove the lids 
 would be a major challenge.\n\nRemoving an estimated 900 tons of melted 
 fuel debris from three reactors is a daunting task expected to take 
 decades, and officials have not been able to describe exactly when or how 
 it may end.\n\nThe Fukushima plant was to start removing melted fuel debris 
 from Unit 2, the first of three reactors, later this year ahead of the 10th 
 anniversary of the accident. But in December, plant operator Tokyo Electric 
 Power Co. and the government announced a delay until 2022. They said the 
 development of a robotic arm for the debris removal--a joint project with 
 Britain--has been delayed due to the pandemic.\n\nUnder the current plan, a 
 remote-controlled robotic arm will be inserted from the side of the reactor 
 to reach the molten fuel mixed with melted parts and concrete floor of the 
 reactor. Eventually the lids also would have to be removed, but their 
 contamination is a major setback.\n\nThe team of experts entered areas 
 inside the three reactors that were previously highly contaminated and 
 inaccessible after radiation levels came down significantly. They're 
 seeking data and evidence before they get lost in the cleanup.\n\nMassive 
 radiation from the reactors has caused some 160,000 people to evacuate from 
 around the plant. Tens of thousands are still unable to return 
 home.\n\n\nWith six months to go, the Tokyo Olympics are swimming against a 
 tide of doubt\nhttps://www.washingtonpost.com/.../olympics-tokyo.../\nA man 
 sits on the shoreline near the Olympic Rings in Tokyo. (Carl Court/Getty 
 Images)\nA man sits on the shoreline near the Olympic Rings in Tokyo. (Carl 
 Court/Getty Images)\nBy \nSimon Denyer and \nRick Maese\nJan. 23, 2021 at 
 1:59 a.m. PST\n\nTOKYO — When the Summer Games were postponed in March of 
 last year, organizers had a vision: In July 2021, a torch would be carried 
 into this city’s new National Stadium, and its flame would bring the 
 Olympic cauldron to life. The Tokyo Games would be emblematic of 
 mankind’s victory over the coronavirus and a source of renewed hope for 
 the planet.\nSix months before those Opening Ceremonies are scheduled to 
 take place, the International Olympic Committee and Japanese Prime Minister 
 Yoshihide Suga maintain that vision will become reality.\nBut the virus is 
 not so easily beaten, and the past two weeks have obscured such optimism in 
 a fog of doubt. Gripped with its worst wave of infections since the 
 pandemic began, Japan placed Tokyo under a state of emergency Jan. 7.\nThe 
 sports world also felt the effects of the rising virus numbers. Outbreaks 
 among scores of Japanese sumo wrestlers as well as badminton, rugby and 
 table tennis players have led to mass withdrawals or outright cancellations 
 in the past two weeks. Outside Japan, the Australian Open was thrown into 
 disarray when air passengers coming from qualifying tournaments in Qatar 
 tested positive on arrival.\nEven as Tokyo 2020 organizers insisted their 
 determination to hold the event was “unwavering,” a senior Japanese 
 government minister admitted the decision on whether to hold the Games 
 could “go either way.” Australia Prime Minister Scott Morrison said 
 Friday the virus outbreak had put “real pressure” on Suga to cancel the 
 Games.\nPublic opinion in Japan has soured, and the resignation of former 
 prime minister Shinzo Abe on health grounds in September robbed the Games 
 of its biggest believer in the government. The suspicion that Japan may be 
 losing its nerve is growing.\nBut the people closest to the planning for 
 the Games insist a path remains. A year ago, the decision by the Australian 
 and Canadian Olympic committees to withdraw their athletes helped force Abe 
 to agree to a postponement. Today, prospective visitors sound much more 
 confident.\n“The Tokyo Games are definitely on,” Australian Olympic 
 Committee chief Matt Carroll said in Sydney on Friday. “The flame will be 
 lit on the 23rd of July.”\nVirus surge puts ‘real pressure’ on Japan 
 to cancel Olympics, Australia leader says\nThe Olympic world was sent 
 spinning Thursday night by a report in the British newspaper the Times, in 
 which an unnamed Japanese government official said the government had 
 privately concluded the Games would have to be canceled. The report 
 prompted swift denials from Japanese and Olympic officials, and IOC 
 President Thomas Bach spoke Friday with all 206 National Olympic 
 Committees, reassuring them that plans for this summer are still on 
 schedule.\n“We are working to prepare for all the potential scenarios we 
 may face in July to August this year, and this is a wide range,” Bach 
 said in a video statement released Friday by the IOC. “So we are putting 
 together a huge toolbox of measures, and then we will decide at the 
 appropriate time which of the tools we need to address the 
 situation.”\nThe IOC and Tokyo 2020 organizers similarly expressed 
 confidence last spring about delivering an Olympics that summer and faced 
 heavy criticism for being slow in announcing a year-long postponement. Rob 
 Koehler, director general of Global Athlete, an international advocacy 
 group for Olympic athletes, said that drawn-out process and the lack of 
 details surrounding these postponed Games have fomented distrust and 
 consternation for many athletes over the plans for 2021.\n“We all know 
 that every athlete wants to go to the Games, but the question is at what 
 cost?” he said. “And I think that’s where the IOC has dropped the 
 ball. And they’ve dropped the ball since the beginning. I know it’s 
 difficult, but the lack of transparency on what the plans are — surely 
 the IOC has a duty of care to inform athletes and the National Olympic 
 Committees on what are the plans, what are the cutoff dates, what are the 
 precautions being put in place? How can you justify athletes competing and 
 training right now abroad when the rest of society is asked to stay home 
 and locked out in a lot of places?”\nYasuhiro Yamashita, head of the 
 Japanese Olympic Committee, speaks during an interview this week. (Kim 
 Kyung-Hoon/Reuters)\nYasuhiro Yamashita, head of the Japanese Olympic 
 Committee, speaks during an interview this week. (Kim 
 Kyung-Hoon/Reuters)\nWelcoming the world?\nThere are several key questions: 
 whether it is safe for spectators, athletes and the broader Japanese 
 public; whether the sporting integrity of the Games can be maintained; 
 whether the Japanese public can be brought around; and whether the timeline 
 can be managed.\nTokyo 2020 President Yoshiro Mori said at a public lecture 
 this month that a “very difficult” decision on whether to allow 
 spectators will have to be made in February or March. The door to foreign 
 spectators, though, seems to be closing, not least because the prospect of 
 hundreds of thousands of overseas visitors undoubtedly has undermined 
 public support for the Games in this nation, with its island 
 mentality.\n“With athletes, coaches and people around them and the IOC 
 members coming from all over the world, that’s already a huge number,” 
 said Kaori Yamaguchi, executive board member of the Japanese Olympic 
 Committee. “For the volunteers, having spectators from overseas will 
 change their level of concern. Personally, I think it will be difficult to 
 have foreign spectators.”\nU.S. Olympic hopefuls, dealing with a wrecked 
 schedule, continue to adjust in an unusual year\nThe case for some domestic 
 spectators is stronger. On Jan. 4, more than 24,000 physically distanced 
 spectators attended Monday’s season finale of Japan’s professional 
 soccer league at the new National Stadium, where the Opening Ceremonies are 
 set to take place. Even under the state of emergency, Tokyo is allowing 
 5,000 spectators at sporting events, appropriately spaced out, wearing 
 masks and refraining from cheering and shouting.\nJapan isn’t expected to 
 begin vaccinating its population until late February, and medical experts 
 say it won’t be possible to inoculate everyone by July 23. However, it 
 should be possible to bring infection numbers way down by then and have 
 enough vaccine coverage — backed with rapid testing and sensible 
 precautions — to reduce the risks.\nAlthough Tokyo 2020 spokesman Masa 
 Takaya said organizers are not willing to stage the Games behind closed 
 doors, that remains a fallback option: Kyodo News reported Friday the 
 government had begun to consider a spectator-free Games as a way to avoid a 
 cancellation.\nKeeping the dream alive: How athletes are dealing with 
 postponed Olympic Games\nThe bigger questions appear to be how to ensure 
 the safety of the Olympic and Paralympic athletes — and safeguard the 
 integrity of the Games.\nJust this month, 65 wrestlers were forced to 
 withdraw from a national sumo tournament in Tokyo after contracting the 
 virus or being in close contact with someone who had, and 51 players were 
 forced to withdraw from the national table tennis championships in Osaka 
 for the same reason.\nJapan’s entire 22-member badminton team had to 
 withdraw from the Thailand Open after men’s singles world champion Kento 
 Momota tested positive. The opening of Japan’s Top League rugby matches 
 was put on hold after 67 players and staff were found to have the virus, 
 and a cycling event in Wakayama turned into a covid cluster, with 31 of 113 
 participants later testing positive.\nFormer Japanese swimmer Takeshi 
 Matsuda, an Olympic medalist, said it would be a nightmare if an outbreak 
 caused last-minute withdrawals at the Games.\n“The Olympics are the top 
 competition for sports, and if the top athletes from around the world 
 can’t compete, for me that’s not a full-scale Olympics,” he said.\nA 
 year from Beijing Olympics, coronavirus wreaks havoc with winter sports 
 schedules\nTerrence Burns, a former IOC executive and U.S.-based global 
 sports marketing veteran, said everyone involved in the Games realizes 
 “holding an unsafe Games could frankly destroy a lot of the value that 
 the Games stand for and aspire to.”\n“I have a hard time believing the 
 IOC would proceed with a Games that would put athletes’ or spectators’ 
 lives and health at risk,” Burns said. “They have traditionally had a 
 very long-term view on the Games.”\nYet Takaya, the spokesman, said Tokyo 
 2020 and the IOC have been studying all the sporting events that have been 
 taking place around the world during the pandemic, and he promised detailed 
 plans would be issued soon on how infections would be avoided and 
 controlled.\n“All the sporting events that have been happening are a big 
 asset for Tokyo 2020,” he said. “We have to look carefully at what’s 
 going wrong, and that’s exactly we are discussing right now.”\nFutures 
 market\nThe IOC already has asked competitors to minimize their time in the 
 Athletes Village, arriving five days before and leaving 48 hours after 
 their events when possible. The Australian Open model — 14 days of 
 pretournament quarantine — won’t be considered, but Takaya said 
 training sites across the country could be made available for national 
 teams who wanted to arrive early, allowing more time for training and 
 acclimatization — and coronavirus testing.\nParalympians have been 
 another major concern, especially if they have underlying heath conditions 
 that could put them at risk. But those concerns are overblown, insists 
 Craig Spencer, chief brand and communications officer for the International 
 Paralympic Committee.\n“This is where the public perception needs 
 correcting,” he said. “Obviously its impact on someone with a 
 disability could be a different impact compared to other people. So those 
 athletes with high support needs, should they catch covid, are going to be 
 most at-risk. But you’ve got to consider, our athlete community is 
 supremely fit. No matter which sport you’re in the Paralympics, you’ve 
 performed years of training. We’re pretty confident in that 
 regard.”\nGetting vaccinated won’t be compulsory, but the IOC is 
 encouraging Olympic attendees to do so, and it hopes to work with the World 
 Health Organization to make sure athletes have access to supplies.\nWith 
 qualifying events and Olympic trials scheduled for the spring, the timeline 
 isn’t long. But it is long enough, former IOC marketing director Michael 
 Payne said.\n“The key point is it’s six months away,” he said. “And 
 with the vaccine starting to roll out, the situation in the world in six 
 months’ time certainly will look very different now than it does 
 today.”\nLong(er) Road to Tokyo: How U.S. athletes are training during 
 the pandemic\nBut a considerably closer date looms large in the minds of 
 Tokyo 2020 organizers and the government here. On March 25, the Olympic 
 torch relay is set to start in Fukushima prefecture, and no one wants a 
 false start. Contractors start arriving in April, when plans start to get 
 cemented in place. Last year, the Games were postponed March 23, just three 
 days before the relay was set to begin.\nThings may look better in six 
 months’ time, but how much better will they look in two months? Will 
 Japan really be in position to guarantee a safe Olympics 60 days from 
 now?\n“I can understand why people are nervous,” Spencer said. “One 
 thing that ourselves, the IOC and Tokyo 2020, need to get better at in the 
 coming months is explaining to people why we’re optimistic we can deliver 
 a safe and secure Games.\n“There’s so much that’s been going on 
 behind the scenes. We all believe we’ve got the plans in place that can 
 deliver these Games in a safe and secure way. Twelve months ago, we 
 didn’t have that. We do now because we’ve been working our backsides 
 off the last 12 months on this.”\nJulia Mio Inuma contributed to this 
 report.\n\nGames 2020\nJapan Olympic organisers to ban singing in silent 
 Tokyo Games\nCompetitors must take Covid test 72 hours before 
 departure\nTold not to use public transport on arrival in 
 Tokyo\nhttps://www.theguardian.com/sport/2021/feb/03/olympic-athletes-to-be-tested-every-four-days-as-tokyo-publishes-playbook\nJustin 
 McCurry in Tokyo\nWed 3 Feb 2021 07.46 ESTFirst published on Wed 3 Feb 2021 
 05.38 EST\nShares\n25\nThe first version of a playbook of Covid virus 
 safety rules organisers say will ensure the Tokyo Olympic Games can be held 
 from July.\n The first version of a playbook of Covid virus safety rules 
 organisers say will ensure the Tokyo Olympic Games can be held from July. 
 Photograph: Du Xiaoyi/AFP/Getty Images\nThe organisers of the 2020 Olympics 
 are planning a silent Games in Tokyo, with bans on singing and chanting 
 among a list of restrictions officials say will protect athletes, staff and 
 the public from coronavirus.\n\nThe IOC’s first “Covid playbook”, 
 published on Wednesday, is aimed at sports federations and technical 
 officials, but similar measures designed to prevent the Games from becoming 
 a superspreader event are expected to apply to athletes – and possibly 
 spectators – when the Olympics open on 23 July.\n\nThe playbook says 
 visitors should “support athletes by clapping and not singing or 
 chanting”, while athletes will be subject to testing a minimum of once 
 every four days while they are in Tokyo. All visitors will be required to 
 present proof of a recent negative test upon arrival in Japan, but 
 vaccination will not be a condition of participating in the Games, which 
 were postponed for a year last March as the pandemic began its spread 
 across the globe.\n\n\nTokyo Olympics: definitely going ahead unless 
 cancelled again?\n Read more\nAthletes and officials will not be permitted 
 to use public transport without permission, must also wear face masks when 
 appropriate, and practice social distancing. Exceptions will be made for 
 when athletes are eating, sleeping or outside.\n\nDespite speculation the 
 postponed Games could be called off as a result of the pandemic, the 
 IOC’s executive director, Christophe Dubi, said he was confident the 
 guidelines would ensure the safety of everyone involved. “The health and 
 safety of everyone at the Olympic and Paralympic Games are our top 
 priority,” he said. “We each have our part to play. That’s why these 
 playbooks have been created – with the rules that will make each and 
 every one of us a sound, safe and active contributor to the 
 Games.”\n\nDubi added that Tokyo 2020 “will be remembered as a historic 
 moment for humanity, the Olympic movement and all those contributing to 
 their success”.\n\nCraig Spence, of the International Paralympic 
 Committee, said the world knew much more about the virus – and how to 
 contain it – than it did when the Games were postponed. “The thousands 
 of international sports events that have taken place safely over the last 
 year have given us valuable learning experiences,” he 
 said.\n\n“Combining this new knowledge with existing knowhow has enabled 
 us to develop these playbooks, which will be updated with greater detail 
 ahead of the Games.”\n\nDetailed guidelines for broadcasters, athletes 
 and the media will be released in the coming days.\n\n\nWhile a decision on 
 whether to allow fans to attend is not expected for a few months, anyone 
 watching the events will be told to refrain from singing or shouting and to 
 show their support by applauding instead.\n\nA man stands in front of a 
 countdown clock for the Tokyo Games on 
 Wednesday.\nFacebookTwitterPinterest\n A man stands in front of a countdown 
 clock for the Tokyo Games on Wednesday. Photograph: Koji 
 Sasahara/AP\nAthletes and officials will be banned from visiting bars, 
 restaurants and tourist spots in Tokyo and will only be permitted to travel 
 on official transport between the venues and their accommodations. The 
 playbook warns them they could be ejected from the Games for serious or 
 repeated violations of the rules.\n\n“We draw to your attention that 
 risks and impacts may not be fully eliminated and that you agree to attend 
 … at your own risk,” the playbook says. “We trust that these measures 
 are proportionate to mitigate the above-mentioned risks and impacts and we 
 fully count on your support to comply with them. Non-respect of the rules 
 … may expose you to consequences that may have an impact on your 
 participation … [and] your access to Games venues.\n\n\nJapan faces 
 Olympian task with slow start to Covid vaccinations\n Read 
 more\n“Repeated or serious failures to comply with these rules may result 
 in the withdrawal of your accreditation and right to 
 participate.”\n\nJapan has been hit less severely by the pandemic than 
 many other comparable countries, with fewer than 6,000 deaths recorded. But 
 a recent surge in cases last month forced the government to declare a state 
 of emergency in Tokyo and other hard-hit regions that is due to last until 
 early March and to close its borders to non-resident foreigners.\n\nThere 
 is growing concern that an influx of 15,400 Olympic and Paralympic 
 athletes, as well as large number of sponsors, officials and other 
 Games-related staff will spread the virus. Opinion polls show that a large 
 majority of Japanese people do not want the Olympics to go ahead.\n\nThe 
 playbook was released as medical officials in Tokyo warned that doctors and 
 nurses treating Covid-19 patients would not have the time to volunteer at 
 the Olympics. Satoru Arai, the director of the Tokyo Medical Association, 
 said staff were under too much pressure to even consider signing up for 
 Olympic duty.\n\nSign up to The Recap, our weekly email of editors’ 
 picks.\n“No matter how I look at it, it’s impossible,” he told 
 Reuters. “I’m hearing doctors who initially signed up to volunteer say 
 there’s no way they can take time off to help when their hospitals are 
 completely overwhelmed.”\n\nGames organisers and the Tokyo metropolitan 
 government have asked the association to secure more than 3,500 medical 
 staff for the event.\n\n\nPandemic breaks Olympic spell as public sours on 
 hosting event\nhttp://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/14142773\nTHE ASAHI 
 SHIMBUN\nFebruary 1, 2021 at 13:39 JST\nImages of the official mascots of 
 the Tokyo Olympic and Paralympic Games are on display in Tokyo’s Shinjuku 
 district on Jan. 23. (Takuya Isayama)\nProfessor Yuji Nakamura was caught 
 completely off-guard by his students’ sea change in attitude toward the 
 Tokyo Olympics.\nJust months ago, some of them had enthusiastically 
 volunteered as helpers for the postponed 2020 Summer Games.\nBut at a mock 
 news conference on Jan. 4, when the Utsunomiya University students were 
 acting as Olympic organizing officials, they were all in agreement: “We 
 have made the decision to cancel the 2020 Tokyo Olympic and Paralympic 
 Games.”\nIt’s not just young people who have soured on the Tokyo Games. 
 Even those who can recall the “magic” of the 1964 Tokyo Olympics say 
 the spell has worn off for this year’s rescheduled event.\nOlympic fever 
 has died down so much among the pandemic-weary public that anti-Olympic 
 protesters in Tokyo who were once vilified as unpatriotic are now receiving 
 words of encouragement.\nNakamura, a 59-year-old professor of the School of 
 Regional Design at the university, split the 20 students in his “Policies 
 of sports and leisure” course into five groups. They were assigned to act 
 as Olympic organizing officials and discuss the pros and cons of hosting 
 the quadrennial sporting event amid the novel coronavirus pandemic.\nAfter 
 a 30-minute online discussion about politics, economics and other factors 
 related to the Games, all five groups concluded that the Olympics must be 
 canceled.\n“It is difficult to hold qualifying sessions, which means the 
 selection process is not fair,” one group said.\n“The health care 
 system cannot catch up with the virus,” another group said.\nNakamura had 
 expected at least one group would decide to postpone the Games again or 
 hold the event without spectators.\n“I was shocked,” he said.\nIn 
 autumn, Nakamura asked a group of students about their opinions on the 
 Summer Games.\n“I have signed up as a volunteer so I want the Olympics to 
 be held,” a student said.\n“I believe the Olympics energize society,” 
 another student assessed.\nFor Nakamura, the Olympics have always been 
 special. “It’s more than just a game. It has the power to move the 
 world,” he said.\nBut the novel coronavirus has also changed the world, 
 as well as attitudes on holding the sports extravaganza.\n“I have to 
 admit that in the midst of the pandemic, students today may not have 
 special feelings for the Olympics anymore,” Nakamura said.\nANTI-OLYMPIC 
 PROTESTERS FEEL CHANGE\nThe public’s change of heart is also evident on 
 the streets of the capital.\nA 60-year-old man has joined a street 
 demonstration every month to voice opposition to the Tokyo Olympics and 
 hand out fliers. Protesters have argued the Games are huge waste of 
 taxpayers’ money, and the costs will rise further because of the 
 postponement and necessary adjustments.\nHe said he used to get icy stares 
 from passers-by as if he was an oddity. They could not understand why 
 anyone would object to holding the Olympics, he said.\n“Around last 
 summer, when the second wave of the pandemic hit, people on the street 
 started seeing us in a different light,” the man said.\nNowadays, more 
 people are taking fliers and listening to what the protesters have to say 
 about the Olympics.\nHe said he has been accosted by people who say, 
 “Good luck!” and, “We have more important things to worry about than 
 hosting the Olympics, don’t we?”\nPANDEMIC LIFTS MAGIC SPELL\nSatoshi 
 Ukai, a 65-year-old professor emeritus of modern French literature and 
 thought at Hitotsubashi University, has expressed opposition to the 2020 
 Games since the event was awarded to Tokyo in 2013.\nUkai said the Japanese 
 public has embraced the narrative that the 1964 Tokyo Games played a 
 pivotal role in Japan’s postwar rebuilding. That event filled in for the 
 1940 Tokyo Olympics that were canceled because of World War II.\nSince 
 then, the public has shared a social memory that “the Olympics are a 
 totally awesome event,” Ukai said.\nBut the COVID-19 pandemic has 
 “lifted the spell,” he said.\n“The public has realized that obsessing 
 over the Olympics is detrimental to the measures to contain the 
 pandemic,” he said. “It was a magic spell after all. Once the spell is 
 broken, it will become irreversible.”\nDEFLATED BASKETBALL DREAM\n“The 
 romance is over,” a 49-year-old man who runs a bar in Saitama Prefecture 
 posted on Twitter in November.\nShortly after that tweet, he canceled 12 
 precious Olympic tickets for men’s basketball that he had won in the 
 lottery. He received a refund of 180,000 yen ($1,730).\nHe was looking 
 forward to seeing the competition live at Saitama Super Arena, an Olympic 
 venue not far from his neighborhood, with his customers.\nThe bar owner 
 became hooked on the Olympics when he watched the U.S. basketball “Dream 
 Team” dominate the 1992 Barcelona Games.\nThe man had been playing the 
 sport since he was a junior high school student. But seeing the team led by 
 NBA stars like Michael Jordan and Magic Johnson was something special.\nHe 
 said he was also moved by Kosei Inoue’s gold-medal performance in judo at 
 the 2000 Sydney Olympics.\n“Watching a sport that I would not normally 
 see is the appeal of the Olympics, and it thrilled me,” the man said.\nHe 
 said he was looking forward to seeing Rui Hachimura, a forward for the 
 Washington Wizards, return to Japan and play in the 2020 Tokyo Games.\nBut 
 the bar owner soon had more pressing matters to deal with.\nAs the pandemic 
 continued, monthly sales of his business fell from a peak of about 900,000 
 yen to 100,000 to 200,000 yen now.\nHe needed the 180,000-yen refund to 
 save the bar. He also said he was worried about contracting the virus by 
 attending the basketball games.\n“I can’t even foresee my life right 
 now,” he said. “I’m in no mood for having lots of fun at the 
 games.”\nNonetheless, he still hopes the Olympics will be held for the 
 sake of the athletes.\n“If it can be held safely, I want to buy a ticket 
 again,” he said.\nThe Games’ organizer said that of about 4.45 million 
 tickets that had been sold, 810,000, or 18 percent, have been canceled and 
 refunded.\nBANKING ON VACCINE\nAn Asahi Shimbun survey conducted on Jan. 23 
 and 24 showed that only 11 percent of voters want the Olympics held in 
 summer as scheduled, 19 percentage points down from a December survey.\nBut 
 government leaders in Japan have flatly denied the possibility of canceling 
 the Games. They are betting the house on a COVID-19 vaccine and plan to 
 start distributing doses as early as the end of February.\nPrime Minister 
 Yoshihide Suga has said that holding the Olympics would be “proof that 
 humankind has overcome the coronavirus,” repeating the phrase uttered by 
 his predecessor, Shinzo Abe.\nSuga, whose approval ratings have plummeted, 
 believes he can win public support for his aggressive remarks concerning 
 the Olympics once the inoculations begin.\n“That will change the mood of 
 the people,” Suga said.\nTokyo Governor Yuriko Koike, who has sometimes 
 butted heads with the central government over how to deal with the 
 pandemic, appears to be in step with Suga on the Olympic issue.\nAfter The 
 Times, a British newspaper, reported that Japanese government officials had 
 privately concluded that the Olympics will have to be canceled, citing an 
 anonymous source, Koike immediately rejected the article.\n“We should 
 wage a protest” she said on Jan. 22. “There has been no such talk at 
 all that the Games will have to be canceled or postponed.”\nThe Suga 
 administration views the Olympics and the return of overseas visitors as a 
 now-or-never spark for the economy that has been battered by the 
 pandemic.\nUnder the administration’s best-case scenario, a successful 
 Olympics will provide a springboard for Suga to hold a snap Lower House 
 election.\nThat scenario will work for Koike as well, a Tokyo metropolitan 
 government official said.\nThe capital “may not feel the benefits (of the 
 Games) for a temporary period, but it will boost the flagging economy,” 
 the official said.\nPLEASE BE PATIENT\nBut with the greater Tokyo 
 metropolitan area still fighting to bring the third wave of the virus under 
 control, some officials are voicing opinions that go against the grain of 
 the government’s official stance.\n“How many Tokyo residents want the 
 Olympics to happen?” a high-ranking metropolitan government official 
 asked. “It is not surprising that people have urged the government to 
 spend more money on anti-virus measures (than on Olympic 
 preparations).”\nIn addition, the COVID-19 situation remains much more 
 grave in many other countries around the world.\n“Realistically speaking, 
 if the United States and major countries in Europe decide not to (send 
 athletes), it won’t be an Olympics in the true sense of the word,” a 
 person close to Suga said.\nA top official of the Japanese organizing 
 committee called for patience.\n“We’re biting the bullet right now,” 
 the official said. “Once the effects of the state of emergency kick in, 
 the vaccine inoculation program gets started and the number of new 
 infection cases goes down, things will get better.”\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2021/02/19/18840165.php
SUMMARY:Rally-Speak Out Thursday On Tenth Anniversary of Fukushima NUKE Meltdowns
LOCATION:San Francisco Japanese Consulate\n275 Battery St/California St.\nSan 
 Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2021/02/19/18840165.php
DTSTART:20210311T230000Z
DTEND:20210312T000000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
