Marin Independent Journal

Japan marks 13 years since nuke disaster

- By Mari Yamaguchi

Japan marked the 13th anniversar­y of the massive earthquake and tsunami that triggered a nuclear meltdown and left large parts of Fukushima prefecture uninhabita­ble on Monday with a minute of silence and memorial events, where officials pledged continued support for rebuilding.

The 9.0 magnitude quake and tsunami that ravaged parts of Japan's northeaste­rn coast on March 11, 2011 killed about 20,000 people and drove thousands from their homes in the prefecture­s of Miyagi, Iwate and Fukushima.

At 2:46 p.m. — the time when the earthquake struck — people across Japan stopped to observe a minute of silence. In Tokyo's central Ginza shopping district, people stopped to pray on the sidewalk as a bell rang out, marking the moment.

In the town of Minamisanr­iku in Miyagi prefecture, a team of 10 uniformed police officers sifted though gravel and sand on the beach in an annual search for the remains of people who are still missing. Survivors prayed by the bare girders that used to be the town's disaster prevention center, where dozens died. In the town of Natori, about 400 people prayed and released balloons carrying messages of grief.

In Ishinomaki City in Iwate prefecture, residents gathered in a hilltop park where many of them took shelter 13 years ago, mourning as they stood facing the sea. In Rikuzentak­ata, about 100 people prayed atop a massive concrete seawall.

And at a ceremony in Fukushima prefecture, where some 20,000 people still cannot return to their homes because of radiation, Gov. Masao Uchibori vowed that rebuilding will continue as the decades-long work of cleaning up the nuclear site continues.

“We will not give up,” he said. “I pledge in front of the quake and tsunami victims that we will accomplish recovery at any cost.”

A wall of water over 15 meters (50 feet) tall slammed into the coastal Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, destroying its power supply and cooling systems, triggering meltdowns in three of its six reactors, and spewing radiation across the surroundin­g areas.

The disaster initially forced more than 160,000 people to leave their homes. Work to remove highly radioactiv­e melted fuel debris has still not begun at the plant, and the overall decommissi­oning project is expected to last decades.

At the ceremony in Fukushima, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida renewed a pledge that the government will help secure jobs, livelihood­s and the safe decommissi­oning of the plant so the former residents can return home.

“We will continue to do utmost for the full-fledged recovery and rebirth, as well as the recovery of the northeaste­rn region,” he said.

Most deaths from the tsunami and earthquake took place in Miyagi and Iwate prefecture­s, north of Fukushima, but they have been able to recover faster because they were not exposed to nuclear waste. The reconstruc­tion of roads, seawalls and other infrastruc­ture has been largely completed in Iwate and Miyagi prefecture­s, but many former residents have not returned due to the loss of communitie­s.

This year's memorial events also remembered victims of the devastatin­g quake that struck Japan's north central region of Noto on Jan. 1, which triggered renewed calls for a review of evacuation plans nationwide, including around nuclear plants.

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