China Daily (Hong Kong)

Fukushima evacuees trickle back home Even six years after the nuclear disaster, most young people choose not to return

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NAMIE, JAPAN — A truck occasional­ly whizzes past the darkened shops with cracked walls and fallen signs that line the main street of Japan’s mostly deserted seaside town of Namie.

Workers repair a damaged home nearby, and about 60 employees busily prepare for the return of former residents in the largely untouched town hall. Not far away, two wild boars stick their snouts in someone’s yard, snuffling for food.

Signs of life are returning nearly six years after panicked residents fled radiation spewed by the nearby Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, when it was struck by an earthquake and tsunami.

Still, only several hundred of the original 21,500 residents plan to return in the first wave, esti- mates Hidezo Sato, a former seed merchant who helped draw up a blueprint to rebuild the town.

“As a person who used to sell seeds for a living, I believe now is a time to sow seeds” for rebuilding, said Sato, 71. “Harvesting is far away. But I hope I can manage to help bring about fruition.”

Since November, people who registered have been allowed to spend nights in the town, but residents will not need permission to stay round the clock after Japan lifts evacuation orders for parts of Namie and three other towns at the end of March.

The closest area

Just 4 kilometers away from the wrecked plant, Namie is the closest area cleared for the return of residents since the disaster of March 11, 2011.

But the town will never be the same, as radiation contaminat­ion has left a big area off limits. And it may never be inhabitabl­e.

More than half — 53 percent — of former residents have decided not to return, a govern- ment poll showed in September. They cited concerns over radiation and the safety of the nuclear plant, which is being dismantled in an arduous, 40-year effort.

More than three-quarters of those aged 29 or less do not intend to return, which means old people could form the bulk of the town’s population in a future largely devoid of children.

“Young people will not go back,” said Yasuo Fujita, a former Namie resident who runs a restaurant in Tokyo. “There will neither be jobs nor education for children.”

Fujita said he did not want to live near a possible storage site for contaminat­ed soil, now being systematic­ally removed.

Radiation levels at Namie town hall stood at 0.07 microsieve­rts per hour on Feb 28, little different from the rest of Japan.

But in the nearby town of Tomioka, a dosimeter read 1.48 microsieve­rts an hour, nearly 30 times higher than in downtown Tokyo, underscori­ng lingering radiation hotspots.

For the towns’ evacuation orders to be lifted, radiation must fall below 20 millisieve­rts per year. They must also have functionin­g utilities and telecoms systems, besides basic health, elderly care and postal services.

Prospects for business are not exactly bright in the short term, but lumber company president Munehiro Asada said he restarted his factory in the town to help drive its recovery.

“Sales barely reach a tenth of what they used to be,” he said. “But running the factory is my priority. If no one returns, the town will just disappear.”

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