The Borneo Post

Japan councils appeal tsunami death compensati­on rulings

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TOKYO: Two local government­s have appealed to Japan’s top court, challengin­g rulings that awarded millions of dollars in compensati­on to families whose children were swept out to sea in a 2011 tsunami.

In late April, the Sendai High Court upheld a district court judgement ordering the two local government­s to pay a combined 1.43 billion yen ( US$ 13.7 million) to families of 23 children who were killed in the disaster.

The victims, from the public Okawa Elementary School in the city of Ishinomaki, were among a total of 74 children who perished in rising waters after being told to wait for more than 40 minutes in school grounds with teachers, 10 of whom also died.

On Thur sday, the loc a l government­s appealed against the latest compensati­on ruling before the Supreme Court, an official with Ishinomaki city’s education board told AFP.

“It’s nearly impossible for the principal and other teachers, who are not anti- disaster experts, to predict a tsunami,” Masato Chiba said.

The plaintiffs argue that their children would have survived if they had been evacuated in time.

Hiroyuki Konno, who lost a 12- year- old son and represents the plaintiffs, voiced disappoint­ment at the appeal, tel ling public broadcaste­r NHK: “I want the Supreme Court to make a judgement that can protect the lives of children in the future.”

A massive undersea quake on March 11, 2011, sent a giant tsunami barrelling into Japan’s northeaste­rn coast, leaving about 18,500 people dead or missing, and sending three reactors into meltdown at the Fukushima nuclear plant.

It was Japan’s worst postwar disaster and the most serious nuclear accident since Chernobyl in 1986.

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