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OBOF YEAR FOUR INDEX
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OBOF TYMHM PART 14-01
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OBOF TYMHM PART 14-02
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Jan. 09, 2014
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OBOF TYMHM PART 14-05
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JAN 30, 2014
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OBOF TYMHM PART 14-06
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Feb. 06, 2014
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OBOF TYMHM PART 14-06 EXTRA
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Feb. 09, 2014
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Mar. 08, 2014
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OBOF TYMHM PART 14-11
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Mar. 13, 2014
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OBOF TYMHM PART 14-11 EXTRA
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Mar. 15, 2014
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Agenda
1. Thoughts from Floyd
2. The third anniversary of the Fukushima
catastrophe.
3. An interview with the man who was
PM of Japan
at time of Fukushima
catastrophe.
THOUGHTS FROM
FLOYD
At the time of the
Cold War with Russia , I was
Civil Defense Director in a small county in Illinois .
It was then when I was introduced to the affects of radiation. I have been personally concerned as to what
the future will be like ever since 3-11-11.
I have never felt that we were being correctly informed from the very
beginning. I can kind-of understand
why. Even with the information we were
given there was a run on iodine on the west coast, which is the only treatment
that can help with low exposure of radiation.
The two articles in
this posting are real wake up calls. I
feel that, while they are long, they really provide interesting and valuable
information. As in most articles, the
real meat of them comes after you get passed the first few paragraphs. Keep in mind that in a previous article it
was reported that they have now traced radiation in the ocean at Alaska . This matter is far from over, if it will ever
be over.
~~~
The
Third Anniversary of the Start of the Fukushima
Catastrophe
Karl Grossman
NationofChange
/ Op-Ed
Published: Monday 3 March 2014
ABOUT Karl Grossman
Karl
Grossman, professor of journalism at the State University of New York/College
at Old Westbury, is the author of Cover Up: What You Are Not Supposed to Know
About Nuclear Power and host of TV programs including “The Push to Revive
Nuclear Power” and “Chernobyl: A Million Casualties” (www.envirovideo.com).
With the third anniversary
of the start of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear catastrophe coming next week, (March 11, 2011) the attempted Giant Lie about the disaster continues a suppression of
information, an effort at dishonesty of historical dimensions.
It involves international
entities, especially the International Atomic Energy Agency, national
governmental bodies led in Japan
by its current prime minister, the powerful nuclear industry and a “nuclear
establishment” of scientists and others with a vested interest in atomic
energy.
Deception was integral to
the push for nuclear power from its start. Indeed, I opened my first book on
nuclear technology, Cover Up: What You Are Not Supposed
to Know About Nuclear Power, with: “You have not been informed about
nuclear power. You have not been told. And that has been done on purpose. Keeping the public in the dark was deemed
necessary by the promoters of nuclear power if it was to succeed. Those in government, science, and private
industry who have been pushing nuclear power realized that if people were given
the facts, if they knew the consequences of nuclear power, they would not stand
for it.”
Published in 1980, the
book led to my giving many presentations on nuclear power at which I’ve often
heard the comment that only when catastrophic nuclear accidents happened would
people fully realize the deadliness of atomic energy.
Well, massive nuclear
accidents have occurred. The 1986 Chernobyl
disaster and the Fukushima
catastrophe that began on March 11, 2011 and is ongoing with large discharges
of radioactive poisons continuing to be discharged into the environment.
Meanwhile, the posture of
the nuclear promoters is denialinsisting the impacts of the Fukushima catastrophe are essentially non-existent.
A massive nuclear accident has occurred
and they would make believe it hasn’t.
“Fukushima is an eerie replay of the denial and controversy that began with
the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki,” wrote Yale University Professor
Emeritus Charles Perrow in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists last
year.
“This is the same nuclear denial that also
greeted nuclear bomb tests, plutonium plant disasters at Windscale in northern
England and Chelyabinsk in the Ural Mountains, and the nuclear power plant
accidents at Three Mile Island in the United States and Chernobyl in what is now Ukraine.”
The difference with Fukushima is the scale of
disaster. With Fukushima
were multiple meltdowns at the six-nuclear plant site. There’s been continuing pollution of a major
part of Japan, with radioactivity going into the air, carried by the winds to
fall out around the world, and gigantic amounts of radioactivity going into the
Pacific Ocean moving with the currents and carried by marine life that ingests
the nuclear toxins.
Leading the Fukushima
cover-up globally is the International Atomic Energy Agency, formed by the
United Nations in 1957 with the mission to “seek to accelerate and enlarge the
contribution of atomic energy to peace, health, and prosperity throughout
the world.”
Of the consequences of the Fukushima
disaster, “To date no health effects have been reported in any person as a
result of radiation exposure from the accident,” declared the IAEA in 2011, a claim it holds to today.
Working with the IAEA is the World Health Organization. WHO was captured on
issues of radioactivity and nuclear power early on by IAEA. In 1959, the IAEA
and WHO, also established by the UN, entered into an agreementthat continues
to this dayproviding that IAEA and WHO “act in close co-operation with each
other” and “whenever either organization proposes to initiate a program or
activity on a subject in which the other organization has or may have a
substantial interest, the first party shall consult the other with a view to
adjusting the matter by mutual agreement.”
The IAEA-WHO deal has
meant that “WHO cannot undertake any research, cannot disseminate any
information, cannot come to the assistance of any population without the prior
approval of the IAEA...WHO, in practice, in reality, is subservient to the IAEA
within the United Nations family,” explained Alison Katz who for 18 years
worked for WHO, on Libbe HaLevy’s “Nuclear Hotseat” podcast last year.
On nuclear issues “there has been a very high level, institutional and
international cover-up which includes governments, national authorities, but
also, regrettably the World Health Organization,” said Katz on the program titled, “The WHO/IAEAUnholy Alliance
and Its Lies About Int’l Nuclear Health Stats."
Katz is now with an
organization called IndependentWHO which works for “the complete independence
of the WHO from the nuclear lobby and in particular from its mouthpiece which
is the International Atomic Energy Agency. We are demanding that independence,”
she said, “so that the WHO may fulfill its constitutional mandate in the area
of radiation and health.”
“We are absolutely
convinced,” said Katz on “Nuclear Hotseat,” “that if the health and
environmental consequences of all nuclear activities were known to the public,
the debate about nuclear power would end. In fact, the public would probably
exclude it immediately as an energy option.”
WHO last year issued a report on the impacts of the Fukushima disaster claiming that “for the general
population inside and outside of Japan , the predicted risks are low
and no observable increases in cancer rates above baseline rates are
anticipated.”
Then there is the new
prime minister of Japan, Shinzo Abe, who last year insisted before the
International Olympic Committee as he successfully pushed to have the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo (180 miles
from Fukushima): “There are no health-related problems until now, nor will
there be in the future, I make the statement to you in the most emphatic and
unequivocal way.” Abe has been driving hard for a restart of Japan ’s 54 nuclear power plants, all shut down
in the wake of the Fukushima
catastrophe.
His is a totally different view than that of his predecessor, Naoto Kan ,
prime minister when the disaster began. Kan
told a conference in New York City last year of
how he had been a supporter of nuclear power but after the Fukushima accident "I changed my
thinking 180-degrees, completely.” He declared that at one point it looked like
an "area that included Tokyo "
and populated by 50 million people might have to be evacuated. "We do have
accidents such as an airplane crash and so on," Kan said, "but no other accident or
disaster" other than a nuclear plant disaster can "affect 50 million
people... no other accident could cause such a tragedy." Moreover, said Kan , “without nuclear
power plants we can absolutely provide the energy to meet our demands."
Japan since the accident began has tripled its use of solar energy, he said,
and pointed to Germany
as a model with its post-Fukushima commitment to shutting down all its nuclear
power plants and having "all its power supplied by renewable power"
by 2050. The entire world could do this, said Kan. "If humanity
really would work together... we could generate all our energy through
renewable energy."
A major factor in Abe’s
stance is Japan
having become a global player in the nuclear industry. General Electric (the
manufacturer of the Fukushima
plants) and Westinghouse have been the Coke and Pepsi of nuclear power plants
worldwide, historically building or designing 80 percent of them. In 2006,
Toshiba bought Westinghouse's nuclear division and Hitachi entered into a partnership with GE in
its nuclear division. Thus the two major nuclear power plant manufacturers
worldwide are now Japanese brands. Abe has been busy traveling the world
seeking to peddle Toshiba-Westinghouse and Hitachi-GE nuclear plants to try to
lift Japan ’s
depressed economy.
As for the nuclear industry, the “Fukushima
accident has caused no deaths,” declares the World Nuclear Association in its
statement “Safety of Nuclear Power Reactors...Updated
October 2013.” The group, “representing the people and organizations of
the global nuclear profession,” adds: “The Fukushima accident resulted in some radiation
exposure of workers at the plant, but not such as to threaten their
health.”
What will the consequences
of the Fukushima
Daiichi nuclear disaster be?
It is impossible to know
exactly now. But considering the gargantuan amount of radioactive poisons that
have been discharged and what will continue to be released, the impacts will
inevitably be great. The claim of there being no consequences to life and the
prediction that there won’t be in the future from the Fukushima catastrophe is an outrageous
falsehood.
That's because it is now widely understood that there is no
"safe" level of radioactivity. Any amount can kill. The more
radioactivity, the greater the impacts. As the National
Council on Radiation Protection has declared: "Every increment
of radiation exposure produces an incremental increase in the risk of
cancer."
There was once the notion
of there being a "threshold dose" of radioactivity below which there
would be no harm. That’s because when nuclear technology began and people
were exposed to radioactivity, they didn’t promptly fall down dead. But as the
years went by, it was realized that lower levels of radioactivity take time to
result in cancer and other illnessesthat there is a five-to-40-year
"incubation" period
Projecting a death toll of more than a million from the radioactivity
released from Fukushima
is Dr. Chris Busby, scientific secretary of the European Committee on Radiation
Risk who has been a professor at a number of universities. . “Fukushima is
still boiling radionuclides all over Japan,” he said. “Chernobyl went up in one go. So Fukushima is worse.”
Indeed, a report by the Institute for Science in Society, based in the U.K. , has concluded: “State-of-the-art analysis
based on the most inclusive datasets available reveals that radioactive fallout
from the Fukushima meltdown is at least as big
as Chernobyl
and more global in reach.”
A death toll of up to 600,000 is estimated in a study conducted for
the Nordic Probabilistic Safety Assessment Group,
which is run by the nuclear utilities of Finland
and Sweden .
Dr. Helen Caldicott, a founder of Physicians
for Social Responsibility, told a symposium on “The Medical Implications of Fukushima ” held last year in Japan : “The accident is enormous in
its medical implications. It will induce an epidemic of cancer as people inhale
the radioactive elements, eat radioactive vegetables, rice and meat, and drink
radioactive milk and teas. As radiation from ocean contamination
bio-accumulates up the food chain...radioactive fish will be caught thousands
of miles from Japanese shores. As they are consumed, they will continue the the
cycle of contamination, proving that no matter where you are, all major nuclear
accidents become local.”
Dr. Caldicott, whose books
on nuclear power include Nuclear Madness, also stated:
“The Fukushima
disaster is not over and will never end. The radioactive fallout which remains
toxic for hundreds to thousands of years covers large swaths of Japan will
never be ‘cleaned up’ and will contaminate food, humans and animals virtually
forever.”
Arnie Gundersen, a former nuclear industry senior vice president, has said: “The health impacts to the Japanese will
begin to be felt in several years and out to 30 or 40 years from cancers. And I
believe we’re going to see as many as a million cancers over the next 30 years
because of the Fukushima incident in Japan .”
At Fukushima ,
“We have opened a door to hell that cannot be easily closedif ever,” said Paul
Gunter, director of the Reactor Oversight Project at the U.S.-based group Beyond Nuclear last year.
Already an excessive number of cases of thyroid
cancers have appeared in Japan ,
an early sign of the impacts of radioactivity. A study last year by Joseph Mangano and Dr.
Janette Sherman of the Radiation and Public Health Project, and Dr. Chris
Busby, determined that radioactive iodine fall-out from Fukushima damaged the
thyroid glands of children in California. And the biggest wave of
radioactivity in the Pacific Ocean from Fukushima
is slated to hit the west coast of North America
in the next several months.
Meanwhile, every bluefin tuna caught in the waters off California
in a Stanford University
study was found to be contaminated with cesium-137, a radioactive poison
emitted on a large scale by Fukushima .
The tuna migrate from off Japan to California
waters. Daniel Madigan, who led the study, commented:
“The tuna packaged it up [the radiation] and brought it across the world’s
largest ocean. We were definitely surprised to see it at all
and even more surprised to see it in every one we measured.”
There is, of course, the enormous damage to property. The Environmental Health Policy Institute of Physicians for
Social Responsibility (PSR) in its summary of the “Costs and
Consequences of the Fukushima
Daiichi Disaster” cites estimates of economic loss of between $250 billion and
$500 billion. Some 800 square kilometers
are “exclusion” zones of “abandoned cities, towns, agricultural land, homes and
properties” and from which 159,128 people have been “evicted,” relates PSR
senior scientist Steven Starr. Further, “about a month after the disaster, on
April 19, 2011, Japan chose
to dramatically increase its official ‘safe’ radiation exposure levels from 1
mSv [millisievert, a measure of radiation dose] to 20 mSv per year 20 times
higher than the U.S.
exposure limit. This allowed the
Japanese government to downplay the dangers of the fallout and avoid evacuation
of many badly contaminated areas.”
And last year the Japanese government enacted a new State Secrets Act which
can restrictwith a penalty of 10 years in jailreporting on Fukushima .
“”It’s the cancerous mark of a
nuclear regime bound to control all knowledge of a lethal global catastrophe
now ceaselessly escalating,” wrote Harvey Wasserman, co-author of Killing
Our Own, in a piece aptly titled “Japan’s New
‘Fukushima Fascism’.”
Meanwhile, back in the U.S. ,
the nation’s Nuclear Regulatory Commission has over the past three years
consistently refused to apply “lessons learned” from Fukushima . Its chairman, Dr. Gregory Jaczko, was forced out after an
assault led by the nuclear industry after trying to press this issue and
opposing an NRC licensing of two new nuclear plants in Georgia “as if Fukushima
had never happened.”
Rosalie Bertell, a
Catholic nun, in her book No Immediate Danger,
Thus the desperate drive in
which a largely compliant mainstream media have been complicit to deny the Fukushima catastrophe, a
disaster deeply affecting life on Earth.
~~~
Ex-Japanese PM: Fukushima Meltdown Was Worse Than Chernobyl and Why He Now Opposes Nuclear
Power
Amy Goodman
Democracy Now! / Video Interview
Published: Tuesday 11 March 2014
ABOUT Amy Goodman
Amy Goodman is the host of "Democracy Now!," a daily
international TV/radio news hour airing on more than 900 stations in North America . She
is the author of "Breaking the Sound Barrier," recently released in
paperback and now a New York Times best-seller.
Three years ago today a massive earthquake triggered a
devastating tsunami that struck Japan ’s
northeast coast, resulting in an unprecedented nuclear crisis: a triple
meltdown at the Fukushima
Daiichi nuclear power station. As Japan marks the anniversary with continued
uncertainty around Fukushima ’s long-term impact,
we are joined by Naoto Kan , Japan ’s
prime minister at the time. It’s rare
that a sitting world leader changes his position completely, but that’s what Kan has done. He explains how he came to oppose nuclear
power while still in office, as he weighed Tokyo ’s evacuation. "It’s impossible to totally prevent any
kind of accident or disaster happening at the nuclear power plants," Kan says. "And so,
the one way to prevent this from happening, to prevent the risk of having to
evacuate such huge amounts of people, 50 million people, and for the purpose,
for the benefit of the lives of our people, and even the economy of Japan, I
came to change the position, that the only way to do this was to totally get
rid of the nuclear power plants."
Transcript:
AMY GOODMAN: Three years ago
today, a massive 9.0-magnitude earthquake triggered a devastating tsunami that
struck Japan ’s
northeast coast. The twin disasters
resulted in an unprecedented nuclear crisis: a triple meltdown at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear
power station. Three years later, about
267,000 people are still living in temporary housing and other makeshift
facilities. Many cannot return home due
to high levels of radiation. The cleanup
and In February, the owner of the
nuclear plant, the Tokyo Electric Power Company, or TEPCO, said about 100
tons of highly radioactive water had leaked from one of the hundreds of storage
tanks at the devastated plant.
On Sunday, thousands of Japanese residents marched to
Parliament and called on the new Japanese government of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe
not to restart some of Japan ’s
48 idled reactors. Speakers at the rally
included former Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan ,
who held the post at the time of the Fukushima
meltdown.
AMY GOODMAN: Since the Fukushima
crisis, Naoto Kan has become a vocal critic of nuclear power, saying it’s too
dangerous for Japan
to keep open any of its nuclear plants. Up until the time of Fukushima , he was a longtime supporter
nuclear power.
In this exclusive extended
broadcast interview, I sat down with former Prime Minister Naoto
Kan when we were in Japan in January. I began by asking him to talk about what
happened three years ago today, on March 11, 2011. Naoto Kan is
translated in the interview by Meri Joyce.
AMY GOODMAN: And so, what did you do?
NAOTO KAN: [translated] So, at the time, one of the first things I did following
the nuclear disaster was to set up a control center to deal with this, and set
up to lead this center three people in particular, one being a staff from
the NISA, one being a representative of the expert academics group on
nuclear power safety and regulations, and one person also from
representing TEPCO, who was actually the former vice president of the company.
And one of the first things that we set up this center to try and do was to
find out what the actual situation in the plant was, what was really happening,
and also try to make predictions about what would happen from there. However, at that time, at first, it was almost
impossible to have any kind of accurate information.
And so, the first thing
that we found out at the time was we were considering that the reactor one at
Fukushima Daiichi was the most likely to be in a very serious situation and have
serious problems. However, even at the
night of that first day of March 11, what I was being told, being reported, was
that the water levels were safely above the level of where the fuel rods were
located within the container. And,
however, now we know that actually the measuring equipment to measure the water
level was broken at that time. And only
four hours after the earthquake occurred, actually, was when it experienced
meltdown in the reactor one. And even
through the container of thickness 20 centimeters, there was actually a hole
being burned through, and melted fuel had been actually leaking through to the
outside of the container. And now we
know this information, that this was happening at 7:00 p.m. approximately on
that day. But at the time, none of this information was accurately conveyed to
me.
And this was actually the
first incident of an accident where a hole in the pressure container was
actually—or a hole had been created. Even at the time of the Three Mile accident,
while there was a partial fuel meltdown inside the container, it wasn’t gone to
the extent of actually having a hole in the container and leaking through in
this way. So the Fukushima accident was the first accident to
actually melt down in this kind of way. And
it was a situation very close to what we call perhaps the "China
syndrome."
And also at this time,
because of the high levels of pressure inside the container, there was the need
to open the vents to release some of this pressure. However, the debate in regards to how to go
about doing this was going between the actual site, the TEPCOheadquarters
in Tokyo and my
office—so, within these three locations, the debate and the discussion going
back and forth. And it was very difficult to obtain accurate information and to
know what was really happening. And so,
the next morning at around 6:00 a.m., very early, I decided that the best thing
to do would be to speak directly with the person responsible at the site. So I departed at 6:00 a.m. by helicopter to go
to the Fukushima
Daiichi site. And there, I met with Mr.
Yoshida, who was the person responsible at the plant, and he explained to me
about the situation, from his perspective, which was occurring on the site. And he was a very clearly spoken man, which
meant that it was very much a plus in terms of considering how to deal with the
situation.
AMY GOODMAN: Wasn’t TEPCO management saying the same thing to you as
this man you spoke to, the head of the actual plant, when you flew there?
NAOTO KAN: [translated] From what I was hearing from the headquarters
of TEPCO, and in particular from Mr. Takeguro, who was the former vice
president, was—had almost no accurate information being conveyed about what was
actually the situation on site.
And one other important
and serious issue at the time also was, in the case of a nuclear disaster, the
system which was in place, well, the prime minister and the prime minister’s
office would be in the head of, you know, the measures to be taken, the office,
of what to be done from there. But the
bureaucratic organization which was established to support that function was
within the NISA, which is actually located within the Ministry of the
Economy.
And so, the person who was
seconded to explain to me from the NISA about what was happening was
actually not an expert on nuclear issues or nuclear power, but an economic expert.
And so, through his explanation, it was impossible to know the actual situation
of what was happening in the reactor.
And so, through this
situation, it really showed to us that in the case of such a severe accident,
the whole situation of the allocation of staff which was in place and what
should be done in that case and what kind of human resources we needed for that
and also what kind of hardware was needed for that, it became clear that no
precautions had been put in place, no consideration of what to actually do if a
nuclear disaster really happened. This
hadn’t been prepared for at all.
AMY GOODMAN: What was the worst-case scenario that you understood at this point, Mr. Kan ?
And after this, I asked
Mr. Kondo, who was the head of the nuclear committee, to simulate what a kind
of worst-case scenario could be, and this simulation was presented to me on
March the 23rd, I believe it was. And
within this scenario, it said that the worst case could mean having to evacuate
up to a 250-kilometer radius of the area, as in this map in my book, which I
have just shown. And this is almost the
same as what I was fearing could be the worst scenario, personally, also. And so, in the case where a
250-kilometer-radius area would have to be evacuated, that would involve 40
percent of the population of the whole country of Japan . This is talking about a population of
something like 50 million people. And
so, when we think about this, or thinking about Japan as a country in the long
term, it would suffer extreme damage. And how to even consider functioning in such a
situation? So we were really just on the
verge of such a situation as this.
AMY GOODMAN: In their book, Strong in the
Rain, the journalists Lucy Birmingham and David McNeill reported
that when the NISA—that’s the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency—spokesman
Koichiro Nakamura let slip soon after the earthquake that meltdown was a
possibility, meaning core fuel melt inside at least one of the reactors, he was
removed from his post. Who removed him?
And so, in regards to how
the government at the time was explaining to the public of Japan of what was
happening, each day in the morning and afternoon the chief of Cabinet would be
giving a press conference to explain the situation. And as well as this, the NISA was
also giving their press conferences. And
in regards to the content of your specific question, this particular
spokesperson gave information that had not actually been reported to the
Cabinet’s office, to the chief of Cabinet, in advance to this. And there was an—you know, there should have
been an agreement where if theNISA was going to be making any such
announcements or having this kind of new information, it should be of course
reported to the Cabinet office; otherwise, there would be differences in the
information which was being presented. And
so, I believe that that was perhaps involved in the background about why
this—there was this change in the position and spokesperson. But this decision was not made by politicians,
but internally within the organization.
AMY GOODMAN: So, there’s the possibility of having 40 percent of Japan evacuated. What happened next?
NAOTO KAN: [translated] And so, first of all, in the case of Japan, we do not
have actually a rule for—in the case of martial law. Ninety years ago, at the
time of the Great Kanto Earthquake, this kind of law was in place, but,
however, this kind of function does not exist within the Japanese system. And so, first of all, I was thinking, well, in
the case where we would have to evacuate these 50 million people, there would
have to be very strong decisions or strong authority in terms of the logistics
of this—for example, transportation or how to go about this. However, at the
time when I received the worst-case scenario from Mr. Kondo on March 23rd, this
was actually—we could say that we had managed to avoid perhaps one of the
biggest potential crises which could have happened. Although the reactors had already happened to
explode at Reactors 1, 3 and 4, and three of the reactors had already by this
stage gone through meltdown, it had been possible also to start to inject
water, and so the temperature within the reactors was becoming somewhat less.
And so, at the time of this report being issued on the 23rd, we could say that
hopefully there would not be a need for such a full-scale evacuation as this
worst-case scenario laid out.
AMY GOODMAN: Former Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan, one of the most notable
opponents of nuclear power since the Fukushima
Daiichi nuclear disaster. He was head of
the country at the time of the crisis and resigned later that year, but not
before he ordered the closure of the Hamaoka Nuclear Power Plant and froze
plans to build new reactors. Back with Prime
Minister Kan in a
moment.
[break]
AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!,
democracynow.org, The War and Peace
Report. I’m Amy Goodman. As we mark the third anniversary of the
triple meltdown at the Fukushima nuclear plant
in Japan , we return to our
exclusive extended interview in Tokyo in the
offices of Naoto Kan , Japan ’s
prime minister at the time of the catastrophe.
AMY GOODMAN: Mr. Kan , can you explain your decision to order
the TEPCO workers to remain at the plant when TEPCO wanted
them removed?
NAOTO KAN: [translated] Well, the first thing which happened at 3:00 a.m. on
March the 15th, the minister for the economy came to my office, came to me, and
he said that the TEPCO headquarters had requested to him for the
workers from the Daiichi site to be withdrawn from their positions. However,
then considering what would happen on the site if all of TEPCO’s technicians from
on site were withdrawn, considering the fact that there were six reactors and
four spent fuel pools at the Daiichi site itself, this would mean the potential
of being—losing control completely of this whole site. Even if the Self-Defense
Forces, for example, were sent into the location, sent into the site, of
course, they are not trained to deal with nuclear operations. So, with
no TEPCO staff, no TEPCO technicians on site, this would,
in effect, mean actually abandoning all of these six reactors and seven pools
on the Daiichi site, which would mean in turn that the worst-case scenario
could actually become reality. And so, despite the, of course, huge risk that
was there, I decided that it was very important to keep the technicians and
the TEPCO workers on site for as long as possible to try and deal
with the situation. So I called in the president of TEPCO to tell him
this, and also I physically went myself to the headquarters
of TEPCO at 4:00 a.m. to directly tell this to the officials of the company.
At the same time, I also
decided it was important, to make sure that decision making and information
could be done properly between TEPCO and the government, to set up a
joint control center. I set this up within the TEPCO headquarters,
but brought in Minister Kaeda and also my adviser, Mr. Hosono, in place to be
permanently within this control center to work with TEPCO and the
government together to try and deal with the situation.
AMY GOODMAN: Who was responsible for this catastrophe, for the meltdown at the
reactors?
NAOTO KAN: [translated] First of all, I believe that the fact that all of the
electricity was lost through this earthquake and tsunami, but no preparation or
no consideration of such accidents or such things happening, and no
preparations being made for this, under the assumption that no accidents could
happen, and the technical side of things from this, including both the
facilities and also the staffing situation, and the lack of ensuring the full
safety of the plant, but still continuing to increase nuclear power plants and
the situation, the responsibility for this lies on the state of Japan and on
the government, including me. There is also responsible on TEPCO as
the operator, in fact, of the site for not predicting, not expecting, not planning
for such an accident to happen. But politically, of course, the responsibility
lies on me, the government at the time, and also the previous government
and TEPCO, in charge of the plant.
AMY GOODMAN: There have been questions about another of the owners of the nuclear
reactors having higher levee walls to protect the reactors. Here you
haveTEPCO very close to those that are regulating them. Who in fact was in
charge?
And in regards to the
second part of your question, in regards to regulations, the safety standards
for construction and operations of the nuclear power plants was in large set by
the Ministry of Economy and within the government. However, when these kind of
standards are being decided, there are of course many different experts,
nuclear experts and so on, debating on this. However, the influence on these
experts by the utility companies is so strong. So this means that, for example,
if there are very strict regulations in place, this means a much higher cost
for the utilities. And so, these experts and the standards that were set—and
this is what I have especially learned from studies which have happened,
investigations later—is that the standards were set at a level which would be
high enough to say to assume to keep safety, but still low to try and keep the
costs also as low as possible, as cheap as possible.
AMY GOODMAN: It’s very rare for the leader of a country to change their position
in the middle of ruling. That’s exactly what happened with you when it came to
your position on nuclear power. You were for nuclear power, and then you turned
against, while you were still a sitting prime minister.
AMY GOODMAN: I wanted to step back. When
you were weighing evacuating Tokyo ,
you had the communities closest to the plant not yet evacuated. The American embassy said Americans should
leave. Other international, other foreign governments told their nationals to
leave. But Japan , you, the prime minister, did
not tell those people at the closest areas, like Futaba. The mayor of Futaba himself evacuated that
community. Why?
NAOTO KAN: [translated] So, at the time, the measures which were in place in the
case of a nuclear disaster is what is first supposed to be done is to set up a
local control center, where the local governments, local municipalities, gather
on this off-site center, as we call it, in the case of an earthquake, for
example, to decide what to happen, or in the case of the nuclear disaster. However, because of the earthquake, it was not
actually possible for these people to actually gather at an early stage, and
also because of the high levels of radiation. So this meant that this off-site center was
not able to function as it should have in the plan. And so, what did happen, in order to decide
upon the policies for evacuation, how to do this, was those who gathered at the
prime minister’s office, so the NISA and also the TEPCO and
experts and so on, debated this. In particular, Mr. [Madarame], who was in
charge of the nuclear safety committee, was giving advice about this, and upon
the advice of Mr. Madarame is how this decision and the policy was put in place
for the evacuation.
And so, upon hearing
reports of the fact that the cooling functions at the plant had stopped, the
first thing that we did was to evacuate those within the five-kilometer radius
of the plant, and then, from here, expanding to the 10, 15, 20 and 30
kilometers, giving instructions for people to remain indoors. And this was done
straightaway on the days of March 11 and March 12. And so, upon the advice and recommendations of
experts as we were thinking how to set these evacuation zones, and when and
how, one of the considerations was that if the broader evacuation zone had been
set right from the beginning, then those who were living closest to the plant,
because of transportation and congestion, may not actually be able to leave the
area. And so the decision was made to first evacuate those closest to the
plant, so within the five-kilometer zone. And then, from there, we gradually
expanded to 10, 15, 20 and so on. At the time, I had been hearing also and we
were aware of the instructions which had been given, for example, by the United States
embassy and the embassies of other countries for their citizens within, for
example, 50 miles to evacuate. However, in the case, of course, from the
position of the Japanese government, there are so many citizens living within
this area, so to move this number of people all at once was something we had to
really consider how this could be feasible.
AMY GOODMAN: Mr. Kan , can you explain what the "nuclear
village" is?
NAOTO KAN: [translated] This is the strongest pressure group politically,
socially, and in terms of even influence on the media, the most powerful of
this kind of network, shall we say, and even now having huge influence.
AMY GOODMAN: Do you think the nuclear village brought you down?
AMY GOODMAN: You have said that the meltdown at Fukushima was the most serious accident in
the history of mankind. More serious than Chernobyl ?
AMY GOODMAN: Do you think that the food and water of Japan is now safe?
AMY GOODMAN: Is part of the reason for the push for nuclear power, even after Fukushima —do you think it
has to do with nuclear weapons, with developing plutonium?
AMY GOODMAN: Months after the nuclear meltdown at Fukushima ,
you went to the 66th anniversary of the U.S.
atomic bombing of Hiroshima .
It was August 6, 2011, that you went for the memorial service. What is the
connection between nuclear weapons and nuclear power?
NAOTO KAN: [translated] Well, first of all, in regards to the anniversary
memorials of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, I participated in these as almost all
prime ministers of Japan do every year, so attendance at this ceremony was not
necessarily because or connected to Fukushima, but something which occurs every
year. However, of course, there is a fundamental connection between Fukushima and Hiroshima , Nagasaki , between nuclear
power and nuclear weapons. The technology of nuclear reactors was actually
developed, of course, through the Manhattan Project, and it is through the
development of foreign nuclear weapons, nuclear bombs, that the technology for
nuclear power plants came about, and the same technology is being used within
this. So there is this fundamental link between the two. As well as it’s
through the creation of plutonium, this connects to, of course, the development
of nuclear weapons, which threaten the whole of humanity, and also nuclear
power, which puts all of humanity at a huge risk. So I personally believe that it is important
to abolish both of these, both nuclear weapons and nuclear power plants. Of
course, in the case of Japan ,
we do not possess nuclear weapons, so we’re working now here in Japan
to prevent or to get rid of nuclear power plants.
AMY GOODMAN: In 2011, Shigeru Ishiba, a former defense minister, said, "I
don’t think Japan needs to possess nuclear weapons, but it’s important to
maintain our commercial reactors because it would allow us to produce a nuclear
warhead in a short amount of time. It’s
a tacit nuclear deterrent." Can you comment on this, Mr. Kan ?
AMY GOODMAN: Why do you think the current Japanese prime minister, Shinzo Abe, is
so pro-nuclear, even after Fukushima ?
AMY GOODMAN: It’s said that there could be an even larger earthquake in the Tokai
trench area of central Japan .
Could this lead to a disaster like Fukushima ,
or even larger?
AMY GOODMAN: Can Japan
secure its energy future without nuclear power??
AMY GOODMAN: You’re traveling the world, and you’ve come to the United States . What’s your international message, and
particularly for President Obama, who is pushing for the building of more
nuclear power plants? This hasn’t
happened in close to 40 years because of the anti-nuclear movement and the
costs of insuring nuclear power plants, as well as dealing with the nuclear
waste. What would you say specifically to President Obama?
And finally, there is one
point which I would like to share also, through many different discussions and
visiting the United States and so on, but one thing which has left a very deep
impression on me through exchange and discussions with the
former NRCchair, Gregory Jaczko, and the thing that he said to me was: We
don’t know when or where a nuclear disaster may happen, but we do know that it
may happen. And so, we need to think not that this won’t happen, but think
about what to do if this does, or how to prevent this from happening. And he, when he was in Japan , met with many people from Fukushima , many people
who it directly affected and suffering from the disaster. And what he said was
that nuclear power plants should not be built in places near where people would
have to evacuate if something did happen. And this is the reason, for example, I hear,
why he was against the extension of the Pilgrim plant near Boston . And I also very much share this
opinion with him. Nuclear power plants should not be built in any kind of
location where people would have to evacuate if something were to happen. So
when we consider that in the case of Japan , there is nowhere where
nuclear power plants could be built, should be built. And within the whole
world also, I believe there is no or probably almost no places where a nuclear
power plant should be built. So I would like to share this, finally.
AMY GOODMAN: What message do you have for anti-nuclear grassroots activists for
reaching the old you, the prime minister of Japan, who was pro-nuclear?
NAOTO KAN: [translated] I personally have visited California, New York and
Boston on the invitation of such grassroots anti-nuclear activists, and
speaking with them and hearing about what they’re doing and also visiting
Taiwan in a similar capacity. I feel that of course it is important to speak or
to approach presidents, Congress, parliaments, but more than this, we need to look
at the local level, how you can speak with your municipal government, mayors,
state governor, for example, and how to approach and work with local political
leaders is the most effective. In the case, for example, of the decision to
decommission the San Onofre plant in California ,
I believe that this was crucial for this point also. So it’s very important. My message that I would like to share for
grassroots activists is to remember to not only look at the national, but also
think about how you can actually approach your local politicians to work for
this.
AMY GOODMAN: Mr. Naoto Kan, arigatou
gozaimasu. Thank you very much.
AMY GOODMAN: Naoto Kan ,
he was prime minister of Japan
when the Fukushima
Daiichi meltdown occurred. He’s one of
the few sitting world leaders to have changed his position completely while in
office. He’s now a leading opponent of
nuclear power anywhere. I interviewed him in his offices in Tokyo , Japan .
Special thanks to Meri Joyce, Makiko
Nakano and Neil Shibata. When we come back, Noam Chomsky.
~~~
If the good Lord is willing and
the creek don't rise, I'll talk with you again about Wednesday or Thursday March
19th or 20th.
God Bless You
All
&
God Bless the United States of America .
Floyd
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