Google – AFP, 10 March 2013
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A woman
holds an umbrella with anti-nuclear slogans during a demonstration
in Tokyo on
March 10, 2013 (AFP, Yoshikazu Tsuno)
|
TOKYO —
Anti-nuclear rallies took place across Japan on Sunday, on the eve of the
second anniversary of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami disaster, urging
Japan's new government to abandon nuclear power.
Tens of
thousands gathered in Hibiya park in central Tokyo, where activists and
unionists packed a concert hall to voice their opposition.
Scholars,
business people and volunteers gave anti-nuclear talks as musicians performed,
before the crowds marched through the government district of Kasumigaseki to
parliament.
They
planned to hand petitions to anti-nuclear lawmakers, urging the government to
stop its nuclear programmes.
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A girl
prays beside her mother during a
memorial ceremony in Rikuzentakata, on March 10, 2013 (AFP, Toshifumi Kitamura) |
"Sayonara,
nuclear power," another sign said.
Similar
rallies were held elsewhere in Tokyo and across the rest of the nation, with
local media reporting as many as 150 anti-nuclear events planned for the
weekend and on Monday.
Protesters
are calling for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who took office late December
following his party's election win, to dismantle all nuclear plants.
Public
opposition to nuclear power peaked after a 9.0-magnitude earthquake struck
Pacific waters in northeastern Japan on March 11, 2011, and unleashed a massive
killer tsunami which battered Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.
The plant
was hit by a meltdown and explosions that severely contaminated the vast
farming region and became the worst nuclear accident in a generation.
Japan
turned off its stable 50 reactors in the wake of the disaster, but restarted
two of them citing possible summertime power shortages.
Abe, whose
conservative Liberal Democratic Party has close ties with the nation's powerful
business circle, has repeatedly said he would allow reactor restarts if their
safety could be ensured.
In many
tsunami-hit cities residents dressed in black Sunday for ceremonies to mourn
the victims of the disasters, which killed 15,881 people while 2,668 remain
unaccounted for.
In the
hard-hit city of Rikuzentakata, where almost 1,600 people died and 217 people
are still missing, mayor Futoshi Toba reiterated his pledge to rebuild the
city.
"We
will move forward to build a beautiful city that is the pride of the nation
where its citizens live happily and comfortably," he said.


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