The National - News

Fukushima disaster trial opens

Former executives charged over nuclear accident

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TOKYO // Three former executives at Japan’s Fukushima nuclear plant went on trial yesterday, the only people to face a criminal court over the 2011 meltdowns that left swaths of countrysid­e uninhabita­ble.

Former Tokyo Electric Power ( Tepco) chairman Tsunehisa Katsumata, 77, and former vice presidents Sakae Muto, 66, and Ichiro Takekuro, 71, all pleaded not guilty to charges of profession­al negligence resulting in death and injury, more than six years after the worst atomic accident in a generation.

Mr Katsumata told a threejudge panel hearing the case that it was impossible for him to have foreseen the risk of the towering waves that swamped Japan’s north-east coast and the reactors in March 2011.

“I apologise for the tremendous trouble to the residents in the area and around the country because of the serious accident that caused the release of radioactiv­e materials,” Mr Katsumata said. “But I believe I don’t have a criminal responsibi­lity in the case”.

The indictment­s are the first and only charges stemming from the tsunami-triggered reactor meltdowns at the plant that set off the worst atomic crisis since Chernobyl in 1986.

The trial could last more than a year.

If convicted, the men face up to five years in prison or a penalty of up to one million yen (Dh32,800).

Prosecutor­s had twice refused to press charges against the men, citing insufficie­nt evidence and little chance of conviction.

But a judicial review panel composed of ordinary citizens ruled in 2015 that the trio should be put on trial, which compelled prosecutor­s to press on with the case.

“Since the accident, nobody has been held responsibl­e ,” said Ruiko Muto, who heads the group that pushed for the trial.

Yoshiko Furukawa was outside the Tokyo courthouse yesterday with dozens of others who fled their homes after the accident.

Thousands have still not returned, mainly because of radiation fears.

“What I lost on March 11, 2011 was a normal life,” said Ms Furukawa, who now lives in another city. “As someone who knew nothing [about the risks of an accident], I’m now in my seventh year as an evacuee.”

Yesterday, the prosecutor told the court that he would try to prove that the three defendants were able to foresee the risk of a tsunami but failed to implement safety measures.

The trio were present at safety meetings where experts warned of the anticipate­d height of a tsunami off the Fukushima coast, he said, with about 230 documents, including emails, to be presented as evidence against the men.

The executives also had access to data pointing to the risk of a tsunami exceeding 10 metres in the area that could trigger severe accidents, he said.

“If they had fulfilled their responsibi­lity to safety, the accident would have never occurred,” the prosecutor said.

An earlier government report said Tepco – which is facing large compensati­on and cleanup costs – simulated the impact of a tsunami on the plant in 2008 and concluded that a wave of up to 15.7 metres could hit after a magnitude-8.3 quake. Waves as high as 14 metres swamped the reactors’ cooling systems in March 2011 after a 9.0 magnitude tremor.

Although the quake-tsunami disaster left about 18,500 people dead, the Fukushima accident is not officially recorded as having directly killed anyone.

The charges against the three are linked to the deaths of more than 40 hospitalis­ed patients who were removed from the Fukushima area and later died.

 ?? Koji Sasahara / AP Photo ?? A Fukushima disaster protester at a rally in front of a Tokyo court ahead of the trial in Tokyo, yesterday.
Koji Sasahara / AP Photo A Fukushima disaster protester at a rally in front of a Tokyo court ahead of the trial in Tokyo, yesterday.
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