New Straits Times

TORCH RELAY TO HIGHLIGHT FUKUSHIMA

Decade after disaster, Olympic torch will shine light on recovery

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When the Tokyo Olympics torch relay kicks off in Fukushima toomorrow, runners are hoping it will show the world the area is no “nuclear wasteland“, a decade after the 2011 disaster.

The pandemic might have overshadow­ed a Games once billed as the “Recovery Olympics” after the earthquake and tsunami catastroph­e, but Fukushima torchbeare­rs say the relay can show their home in a new light.

“From afar, Fukushima might look like a place where time has stood still,” Hanae Nojiri, a reporter with a local TV station who will take part in the relay, told AFP.

“But when people see the spectators lining the roads and the passion of the runners, I think they’ll update their image of the place.”

The virus-delayed torch relay begins about 20 miles (32 kilometres) from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant that went into meltdown when the massive quake and tsunami struck on March 11, 2011.

Around 18,500 people were left dead or missing, most of them victims of the devastatin­g tsunami.

Tens of thousands were forced to flee their homes, with radiation making some areas uninhabita­ble for years.

The area’s recovery is not complete even now, but residents are ready to show the world how much progress has been made.

The torch relay will start at the

J-Village football training facility, which was once the front-line command centre for the clean-up operation at the nuclear plant.

Now it has been restored to its original purpose, with pristine green pitches welcoming the footballer­s who train there.

“I think it’s very meaningful that the relay will start from Fukushima 10 years after the disaster,” said Nojiri.

Cheering is forbidden along the route, which will criss-cross Japan and involve around 10,000 runners, and the relay will be suspended if large crowds gather.

Yumiko Nishimoto, a torchbeare­r on the first day, has

“mixed feelings” over the behindclos­ed-doors departure ceremony, which features a simplified programme with a reduced number of performers.

“Local people were looking forward to it, and some of them wanted to go and watch,” said Nishimoto, who leads a community project to plant 20,000 cherry trees, one of the initiative­s to restore the area.

But Nishimoto is determined not to let the virus put a dampener on the occasion, which she sees as a chance to show “both positive and negative aspects” of Fukushima’s recovery.

Organisers have been keen to play up the benefits of hosting the Olympics for areas affected by the disaster.

“The torch relay will pass through areas where people still can’t return, and you can’t cover that up — that’s the reality and you need to understand that,” said Nojiri.

“But a lot of people are moving forward and living life with a smile on their faces, and I want people to see that.”

William McMichael, a Canadian lecturer at Fukushima University

who has lived in the area since 2007, has been inviting overseas students since the disaster, in the hope of changing perception­s.

McMichael, who will run on the third day of the relay, wants the world to see what Fukushima is really like and hopes residents will “realise that the whole world is still thinking about them.”

Fukushima will also play an active part in the Games, hosting Olympic baseball and softball.

 ?? AFP PIC ?? Hanae Nojiri (centre), a reporter with a local TV station who will be a torchbeare­r on the second day of the relay, works with her crew at the J-Village national centre in Naraha, Fukushima prefecture.
AFP PIC Hanae Nojiri (centre), a reporter with a local TV station who will be a torchbeare­r on the second day of the relay, works with her crew at the J-Village national centre in Naraha, Fukushima prefecture.

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