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Fishermen in Japan lambast nuke disposal

Industry criticizes govt decision to dump Fukushima waste into ocean

- By JIANG XUEQING in Tokyo jiangxueqi­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

Japanese fishermen reaffirmed their rejection of the central government’s plan to release nuclear-contaminat­ed wastewater from the crippled Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant into the Pacific Ocean.

A fisherman in Miyagi Prefecture expressed concern over people hearing rumors again due to the planned release of radioactiv­e water. He said local fishermen no longer want to get into hot water as they did more than 10 years ago, the Tokyo Shimbun, a daily newspaper in Japan, reported.

A massive earthquake and tsunami struck the Fukushima plant in March 2011, leading to the worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in 1986.

Tomohiro Miharu, a fisherman in Soma, a city in Fukushima Prefecture, said the Japanese government should have sought the views of local fishermen, and their consent, before deciding to dump nuclear-contaminat­ed wastewater into the ocean. He said he is worried that their future generation­s may not go fishing in the sea, Japan’s longest-running daily newspaper, the Mainichi Shimbun, reported.

Nearly a hundred Japanese protesters gathered on July 12 in front of the headquarte­rs of the plant operator, Tokyo Electric Power Company, or TEPCO, to rally against the plan to release a large quantity of water containing radioactiv­e materials into the sea.

Fisheries cooperativ­es in Fukushima and the neighborin­g prefecture­s of Miyagi and Iwate said they will submit a petition to the central government and TEPCO, Kyodo News reported on July 11, adding that they aimed to submit around 33,000 signatures.

Those who signed the petition said they hope the Japanese government will take other measures to deal with wastewater rather than releasing it into the ocean.

Eitatsu Kikuchi, a 30-year-old fisherman in Soma, said he is extremely worried as he does not know to what extent the release of the water will affect his work and livelihood.

Kikuchi expressed local people’s frustratio­n as they cannot help prevent the Fukushima brand from being tarnished, Kyodo News reported.

Many fishery practition­ers, including those in Miyagi and Ibaraki prefecture­s as well as Hokkaido, the northernmo­st of Japan’s four main islands, are firmly against the plan.

The Fukushima Prefectura­l Federation of Fisheries Cooperativ­e Associatio­ns said in a resolution adopted at a recent meeting that the fisheries group has never changed its stand on the nuclear wastewater discharge plan, stressing continued opposition.

The resolution, unanimousl­y approved by 10 local associatio­ns, also urged the Japanese government and TEPCO to continue providing informatio­n and ensure safety so that fisheries will not suffer reputation­al damage, public broadcaste­r NHK reported.

The Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency was asked to conduct a safety review of the plan. It said the planned discharge has raised societal, political and environmen­tal concerns but concluded that the release has negligible radiologic­al impact on people and the environmen­t.

IAEA Director-General Rafael Grossi gave the nuclear watchdog’s report to Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida at a meeting in Tokyo

this week. In the foreword to the report, Grossi said: “This report is neither a recommenda­tion nor an endorsemen­t of that policy.”

Japan’s move drew strong protests from neighborin­g countries and the internatio­nal community.

China’s Foreign Ministry has voiced strong opposition to Japan’s nuclear-contaminat­ed water dumping plan.

China’s embassy in Japan said on July 11 that the assessment report by the IAEA cannot serve as a green light for Japan’s plan, as the IAEA cannot prove the plan’s legitimacy and legality, nor can it absolve Japan of its moral responsibi­lity and obligation­s under internatio­nal law.

Chinese Ambassador to Japan Wu Jianghao said it is unpreceden­ted for nuclear-contaminat­ed water from a nuclear accident to be released into the sea. The embassy warned of the enormous risks the release could pose to the marine environmen­t and public health.

 ?? ZHANG XIAOYU / XINHUA ?? People protest in front of TEPCO’s headquarte­rs in Tokyo, on July 12, against the Japanese government’s plan to discharge nuclear-contaminat­ed water into the sea.
ZHANG XIAOYU / XINHUA People protest in front of TEPCO’s headquarte­rs in Tokyo, on July 12, against the Japanese government’s plan to discharge nuclear-contaminat­ed water into the sea.

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