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CREATED:20211004T035600Z
DESCRIPTION:10/11 SF Rally At SF Japanese Consulate  To Stop The NUKES & Defend The 
 People Of Fukushima\nSpeak Out To Stop The Release Of  Radioactive Water In 
 The Pacific\nMonday October 11, 2021 3:00 PM \nSan Francisco Japanese 
 Consulate \n275 Battery St/California St. \nSan Francisco \nSponsored by No 
 Nukes Action \n\nThe continuing dangers of the Fukushima nuclear meltdowns 
 are a  dangerous threat to the people of Fukushima, Japan and the world. 
 The Japanese government regardless of Prime Minister plans to release over 
 a million tons of tritium contaminated water in tanks around the broken 
 nuclear plants. It is opposed by the fisherman of Fukshima, 
 environmentalists and the people of neighboring countries.\n\nThe 
 government which runs TEPCO also  contines to endanger the people who 
 surround the plants and more than ten years after the explosions the 
 radioactive dangers continue to threaten the people. \nNuclear clean-up 
 workers including workers from overseas and other workers are getting  
 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. The government is also 
 seeking to spread the contaminated waste throughout Japan in road 
 construction and other projects. \n\nThe continued support for restarting 
 nuclear plants also takes place in the midst of a covid pandemiic where 
 many people have died in their homes form covid because their hospitals 
 have filled with patients. It also takes place after the\ngovernment spent 
 over $25 billion on the Olympics which further contributed the lack of 
 spending on healthcare & human services.\n\nThe denialism of the dangers of 
 of more nuclear plants by the Japanese government  is also  connected to 
 the call for more militarization of Japan and measures to change the 
 constitution to eliminate Article 9 which prohibits wars abroad.  \nThe 
 government also supports denialism about the role  Comfort Women. This 
 effort to deny the present reality is connected historically to the rulers 
 of Japan and it has led to the cost of millions of lives. \n\nNo Nukes 
 Action asks you to join us and speak out to demand the shutdown of all 
 nuclear plants and the compensation of the families of Fukushima. We also 
 oppose  building of the new Haneko base in Okinawa which the people are 
 massively opposed to. The people of Okinawa have right to a peaceful life 
 without  being  terrorized by US military jets and helicopters and 
 continued rapes and attacks on the women of Okinawa.\n\nWe will also speak 
 out against the US support for this US base and support the removal of all 
 US military bases out of Japan. The defeat of the United States in 
 Afghanistan should not lead to the expansion of US military operations in 
 Asia and this is exactly the policy of both the US government and their 
 ally the Japanese governmment.\n\nPhysical distancing and masks for all 
 participants at action \nSpeak-out In Stop The Restarting Of The Nuke 
 Plants\nDefense of the Residents of Fukushima \nDon’t Dump The 
 Radioactive Water In The Pacific Ocean\nSunday July 11,  2021 3PM \nSan 
 Francisco Japanese Consulate \n275 Battery St/California St. \nSan 
 Francisco \nNo Nukes Action \nhttp://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/ 
 \n\n\nLethal radiation levels detected in Fukushima nuke plant reactor 
 lid\nhttps://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/14440765\nBy TSUYOSHI KAWAMURA/ 
 Staff Writer\nSeptember 15, 2021 at 14:57 JST\n\nPlay VideoNuclear 
 Regulation Authority workers use two remotely controlled robots to measure 
 radiation doses near the shield plug of the No. 2 reactor’s containment 
 vessel at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant. (Provided by the Nuclear 
 Regulation Authority.)\n A remotely controlled robot inserts a dosimeter 
 into a hole created to measure radiation levels beneath the uppermost lid 
 of the No. 2 reactor’s containment vessel in a study on Sept. 9. 
 (Provided by the Nuclear Regulation Authority)\n\nThe operator of the 
 crippled Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant could be forced to reconsider the 
 plant's decommissioning process after lethal radiation levels equivalent to 
 those of melted nuclear fuel were detected near one of the lids covering a 
 reactor.\nThe Nuclear Regulation Authority said Sept. 14 that a radiation 
 reading near the surface of the lid of the No. 2 reactor’s containment 
 vessel was 1.2 sieverts per hour, higher than the level previously 
 assumed.\nThe discovery came on Sept. 9 during a study by the NRA and Tokyo 
 Electric Power Co., the operator of the plant.\nTEPCO plans to insert a 
 robotic arm into the No. 2 reactor’s containment vessel from its side in 
 a trial planned for the second half of 2022 to retrieve pieces of melted 
 nuclear fuel.\n“We will consider what we can do during the trial on the 
 basis of the detection of the concentration of contamination” in the 
 upper area of the containment vessel, a TEPCO official said.\nThe round 
 concrete lid, called the shield plug, is 12 meters in diameter and about 60 
 centimeters thick.\nThe shield plug consists of three lids placed on top of 
 each other to block extremely high radiation emanating from the reactor 
 core.\nEach lid weighs 150 tons.\nWhen operators work on the 
 decommissioning, the shield plug will be removed to allow for the entry 
 into the containment vessel.\nThe NRA said a huge amount of radioactive 
 cesium that was released during the meltdown of the No. 2 reactor in March 
 2011 remained between the uppermost lid and middle lid.\nIn the Sept. 9 
 study, workers bored two holes measuring 7 cm deep each on the surface of 
 the uppermost lid to measure radiation doses there by deploying remotely 
 controlled robots.\nOne radiation reading was 1.2 sieverts per hour at a 
 location 4 cm down from the surface in a hole near the center of the 
 lid.\n\nThe Asahi Shimbun\n\nFukushima plant failed to probe cause of 
 faulty filters\nhttps://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/14440728\nTHE ASSOCIATED 
 PRESS\nSeptember 15, 2021 at 12:10 JST\n\n \nIn this Feb. 27, 2021, file 
 photo, tanks (in gray, beige and blue) store water that was treated but is 
 still radioactive after it was used to cool down spent fuel at the 
 Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant in Okuma, Fukushima Prefecture. (AP 
 Photo)\nOfficials at Japan’s wrecked Fukushima nuclear power plant have 
 acknowledged they neglected to investigate the cause of faulty exhaust 
 filters that are key to preventing radioactive pollution, after being 
 forced to replace them twice.\nRepresentatives of the operator, Tokyo 
 Electric Power Company Holdings, made the revelation Monday during a 
 regular review of the Fukushima No. 1 plant at a meeting with Japanese 
 regulatory authorities. Three reactors at the plant melted following a 
 massive earthquake and tsunami in 2011.\nThe filters are designed to 
 prevent particles from escaping into the air from a contaminated water 
 treatment system--called Advanced Liquid Processing System--that removes 
 selected radioactive isotopes in the water to below legal limits.\n“At 
 the core of this problem is TEPCO’s attitude,” a Nuclear Regulation 
 Authority commissioner, Nobuhiko Ban, said at the meeting.\nTEPCO has been 
 repeatedly criticized for coverups and delayed disclosures of problems at 
 the plant. In February, it said two seismometers at one reactor had 
 remained broken since last year and failed to collect data during a 
 powerful earthquake.\nCompany officials said that 24 out of 25 filters 
 attached to the water treatment equipment had been found damaged last 
 month, after an alarm went off as workers were moving sludge from the unit 
 to a container, temporarily suspending the water treatment. The operation 
 partially resumed last week after the filters were replaced.\nTEPCO said it 
 had detected similar damage in all of the filters two years ago, but never 
 investigated the cause of the problem and did not take any preventive steps 
 after replacing the filters.\nAnother regulatory commissioner, Satoru 
 Tanaka, said at the meeting that the utility company should have responded 
 to the problem more quickly to minimize the risk of possible radiation 
 leakage into the environment.\nTEPCO officials said dust monitors indicated 
 no radiation leaks to the outside or exposure to plant workers inside the 
 water treatment facility.\nAkira Ono, head of TEPCO’s decommissioning 
 unit, said he regretted the utility’s failure to address the problem 
 earlier. He promised to improve safety management.\nJapanese officials are 
 working with the International Atomic Energy Agency to prepare to discharge 
 into the ocean the wrecked plant’s cooling water, treated so its 
 radioactivity levels are below legal limits. Slated to start in spring 
 2023, the controversial plan is fiercely opposed by Fukushima’s fishing 
 community, as well as local residents and nearby countries.\nFully 
 decommissioning the nuclear plant is expected to take decades, experts 
 say.\n\nWoman shows Okinawa’s plight with photos of U.S. copter 
 crash\nhttps://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/14422895\nBy DAIZO TERAMOTO/ 
 Staff Writer\nSeptember 3, 2021 at 07:10 JST\n Michiyo Arakawa visits 
 Okinawa International University in Ginowan, Okinawa Prefecture, on Aug. 
 13. (Daizo Teramoto)\nGINOWAN, Okinawa Prefecture--Michiyo Arakawa has 
 visited Okinawa International University here on Aug. 13 almost every year 
 to take photos in a surrounding residential area since a U.S. military 
 helicopter crashed on the university 17 years ago.\nWhen she finds changes 
 in the townscape, such as new homes having been built, Arakawa is 
 overwhelmed by the unchanging reality of this southernmost prefecture, 
 which continues to be plagued by accidents caused by the U.S. military.\nOn 
 Aug. 13, 2004, Arakawa rushed to the university, about a 15-minute drive 
 from Urasoe, where she lived at the time, after seeing the breaking news 
 about the accident on TV.\nShe saw the charred wall of a building on the 
 campus, just south of U.S. Marine Corps Air Station Futenma, where the 
 CH-53 heavy-lift transport helicopter was based.\nArakawa has since 
 organized an annual exhibition of photos about the accident taken by 
 students and residents to coincide with the anniversary as a leading member 
 of the Watashi no Mita Kabe (The wall I saw) project.\nA photo provided to 
 the Watashi no Mita Kabe project shows Okinawa International University and 
 the surrounding area in Ginowan, Okinawa Prefecture, immediately after a 
 U.S. military helicopter crashed on Aug. 13, 2004. (Provided by the project 
 executive committee)\nOn that day, Arakawa remembered how her father, who 
 was born before World War II, used to tell her that U.S. military aircraft 
 could fall from the sky at any moment.\nIn 1966, a relative of her father 
 was killed when a U.S. military aircraft crashed into a car he was driving. 
 He was 33 years old. Okinawa Prefecture was still under U.S. military 
 occupation.\nArakawa feels uncomfortable seeing U.S. military aircraft 
 flying over the accident site where there is not even a cenotaph every time 
 she passes by the location after she became an adult.\nNo residents were 
 injured when the CH-53 helicopter crashed on Okinawa International 
 University, but the accident uncovered the realities of the lopsided 
 Japan-U.S. relationship.\nThe U.S. military shut down the site for seven 
 days based on the bilateral Status of Forces Agreement and other 
 arrangements. Prefectural police were not allowed to carry out substantial 
 investigations.\nBroken pieces of the fuselage were scattered in a 
 residential area around the university.\nArakawa, a “kirigami” 
 paper-cutting artist, started collecting photos of the crash site taken by 
 students and residents. She felt as if the photos were filled with their 
 anger and frustration.\nOne shows the white wall of the university building 
 with scorch marks, while a java cedar tree whose upper part was chopped off 
 is seen in another.\nA photo provided to the Watashi no Mita Kabe project 
 shows a damaged part of a crashed U.S. military helicopter near Okinawa 
 International University on Aug. 13, 2004. (Provided by the project 
 executive committee)\nThe executive committee of the Watashi no Mita Kabe 
 project collected about 1,000 photos in two years after the accident. The 
 number has increased to about 1,500.\nArakawa was forced to cancel the 
 exhibition for the first time last year due to the novel coronavirus 
 pandemic. She intends to hold the event this year after things settle 
 down.\nIn Okinawa Prefecture, there were eight U.S. military aircraft 
 crashes and 394 crash landings between 2005 and 2020, according to figures 
 compiled by the prefectural government.\nIn June, a U.S. military 
 helicopter made an emergency landing on Tsukenjima island in Uruma in the 
 prefecture.\nThe central government says Japan-U.S. guidelines on responses 
 to U.S. military aircraft accidents have been improved.\nBut Arakawa is 
 left unconvinced as she sees prefectural police officers checking out 
 accident sites from outside the perimeter.\n“I’m sure those who 
 provided the photos are also angry,” she said. “We want to continue the 
 exhibition until there are no more accidents.”\nA photo provided to the 
 Watashi no Mita Kabe project shows the wreckage of a U.S. military 
 helicopter at Okinawa International University. (Provided by the project 
 executive committee)\n\nU.S. Marines in Okinawa dump contaminated water 
 into sewer\nhttps://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/14427364\nTHE ASAHI 
 SHIMBUN\nAugust 27, 2021 at 15:20 JST\n\n The U.S. Marine Corps Air Station 
 Futenma, located in the heart of a residential area in Ginowan, Okinawa 
 Prefecture, in July 2021 (Eiji Hori)\n\nU.S. Marines based in Okinawa 
 Prefecture dumped water contaminated with a potentially dangerous chemical 
 into the local sewage system on Aug. 26, raising a stink among central, 
 prefectural and municipal government officials.\nThe U.S. military did not 
 help matters by informing their Japanese counterparts about the dumping 
 less than an hour before proceeding with it. The incident occurred on the 
 same day U.S. military officials were to discuss with Japanese officials 
 about how to release the water.\n“I feel strong outrage that the U.S. 
 military unilaterally dumped the water even while they knew that 
 discussions were proceeding between Japan and the United States on how to 
 handle the contaminated water,” Okinawa Governor Denny Tamaki said at a 
 hastily called news conference on Aug. 26.\n“The unilateral release of 
 the water is regrettable," a Foreign Ministry official handling the issue 
 said. "We will lodge protests from all possible levels.”\nA Defense 
 Ministry official said, “It occurred so suddenly. I never thought they 
 would do such a thing.”\nThe U.S. Marines said water contaminated with 
 perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) was released into the sewage system from 
 U.S. Marine Corps Air Station Futenma in Ginowan.\nAccording to Okinawa 
 prefectural government officials, an email was received at 9:05 a.m. on 
 Aug. 26 from the U.S. military saying that water treated at a processing 
 plant on base would be released at around 9:30 a.m.\nThe Foreign Ministry 
 in Tokyo received a similar message.\nOkinawa prefectural officials were 
 notified at 10:14 a.m. by the Okinawa Defense Bureau that the water had 
 been released at about 9:30 a.m.\nA local Okinawa newspaper reported in 
 early July that the U.S. military had inquired with their Japanese 
 counterparts about the possibility of releasing the water. Okinawa 
 prefectural government officials asked the Okinawa Defense Bureau to 
 confirm the report.\nU.S. military officials explained to central and 
 prefectural government officials that they had been commissioning a 
 private-sector company to treat the water, but that the fiscal burden had 
 become excessive. But U.S. military officials also said the released water 
 would be treated to meet water quality levels for drinking water before 
 being dumped into the sewage system.\nOkinawa prefectural officials asked 
 that no release of the water be conducted until the safety of doing so 
 could be confirmed.\nThe Ginowan municipal assembly unanimously passed a 
 resolution and opinion paper asking the U.S. military to handle the water 
 in a responsible manner as in the past.\nNO RULES TO STOP SEWAGE SYSTEM 
 RELEASE\nIn its Aug. 26 announcement, the U.S. military said the water had 
 been treated so that most of the pollutants were removed. Okinawa Defense 
 Bureau officials told Okinawa prefectural government officials that about 
 64,000 liters of water had been released.\nThe Okinawa prefectural and 
 Ginowan municipal governments immediately lodged protests with the U.S. 
 military.\nWhile the Environment Ministry and health ministry have water 
 quality standards for the levels of PFOS in rivers and drinking water, 
 there are no rules at the central or local government levels about 
 releasing water containing PFOS into the sewage system.\nThat led to a 
 meeting on July 19 at the Futenma air station among officials of the U.S. 
 military as well as the central and prefectural government. The three 
 parties collected samples of treated water that went through the processing 
 plant on base and were scheduled to conduct separate analyses.\nThe meeting 
 scheduled for Aug. 26 was intended to discuss how to release the results of 
 the three studies.\nAccording to the U.S. military announcement, the water 
 released contained less than 2.7 nanograms of PFOS per liter of 
 water.\nWater quality standards limit the combined presence of PFOS and 
 other substances to 50 nanograms per liter of water.\nBut Tamaki blasted 
 the U.S. military announcement about the water quality level as not 
 relevant because the water was released as discussions were to be held on 
 whether the water could be safely treated.\nA high-ranking prefectural 
 official said without standards for the release of water no estimate could 
 be made about the possible environmental impact. The official added there 
 was a high possibility the water would flow into the ocean untreated as the 
 prefectural government sewage processing facilities are not equipped to 
 reduce the concentration of PFOS.\nGinowan Mayor Masanori Matsugawa touched 
 upon the leaking of firefighting foam containing PFOS from the Futenma base 
 into a nearby river in April 2020.\nHe issued a statement on Aug. 26 that 
 said, “It is extremely regrettable because the release of the water 
 lacked any consideration for local residents who still have not erased 
 their concerns” from last year’s incident.\nMatsugawa, through the 
 Okinawa Defense Bureau, has asked the U.S. military to stop all future 
 releases of such contaminated water.\n(This article was written by Mika 
 Kuniyoshi and Naoki Matsuyama.)\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2021/10/03/18845380.php
SUMMARY:SF Rally At SF Japanese Consulate To Stop The NUKES & Defend The People Of Fukushima
LOCATION:San Francisico Japanese Consulate\n275 Battery St.\nSan Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2021/10/03/18845380.php
DTSTART:20211011T220000Z
DTEND:20211011T230000Z
END:VEVENT
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