Googel – AFP, 9 March 2014
![]() |
Women shout
slogans in front of the National Diet in Tokyo on March 9, 2014
as they take
part in a rally denouncing nuclear power plants (AFP, Toru Yamanaka)
|
Tokyo —
Tens of thousands of citizens turned out for an anti-nuclear rally in Tokyo on
Sunday, as the nation prepares to mark the third anniversary of the Fukushima
disaster.
Demonstrators
congregated at Hibiya Park, close to central government buildings, before
marching around the national parliament.
They
gathered to voice their anger at the nuclear industry and the government of
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who has called for resumption of nuclear reactors to
power the world's third largest economy.
![]() |
A woman
holds a placard in front of the
National Diet in Tokyo on March 9, 2014
as she
takes part in a rally denouncing
nuclear power plants (AFP, Toru
Yamanaka)
|
"Today,
there is no electricity flowing in Japan that is made at nuclear plants. If we
continue this zero nuclear status and if we make efforts to promote renewable
energy and invest in energy saving technology, I think it's possible to live
without nuclear," Kawai said.
This week,
Japan will mark the anniversary of the deadly 9.0-magnitude earthquake that hit
the northern region on March 11, 2011, that prompted killer tsunami that swept
the northern Pacific coastline.
The natural
disasters killed 15,884 people and left 2,636 people still unaccounted for.
Huge waves
swamped cooling systems of the Fukushima plant, which went through reactor
meltdowns and explosions that spewed radioactive materials to the vast farm
region.
The plant
remains volatile and engineers say it will take four decades to dismantle the
crippled reactors.
Protesters
in Tokyo stressed that Japan can live without nuclear power as it has done so
for many months while all of the nation's 50 commercial nuclear reactors have
remained offline due to tense public opposition to restarting them.
In a
light-hearted approach to get their message heard, musicians performed using
electricity generated by huge solar panels at the park, while dozens of
merchants promoted products made in the tsunami-hit region.
![]() |
People
display mock drums of nuclear waste in Tokyo on March 9, 2014
during a march
denouncing nuclear power plants (AFP, Toru Yamanaka)
|
The rally
featured stars like composer Ryuichi Sakamoto, who played music he created
three years ago to mourn for the victims of the disasters.
Although no
one died as a direct result of the atomic accident, at least 1,656 Fukushima
residents died due to complications related to stress and other conditions
while their lives in evacuation become extended.
"The
Fukushima accident continues today," Sakamoto told the audience.
Tokyo
resident Michiko Sasaki, 80, said Japan's national priority should be to think
about how to end nuclear power and to rebuild the northern region hit buy the
disaster.
"In
this small nation of ours, there are so many nuclear plants. We are prone to
earthquakes," she added.
"Unless
we end it now, what will happen in the future? Politicians must think about
children of the future," she said.
![]() |
| Anti-nuclear protests in Taiwan draw tens of thousands |
Related Articles:
Islanders afraid to go home 60 years after Bikini Atoll H-bomb
"Fast-Tracking" - Feb 8, 2014 (Kryon Channelling by Lee Carroll) - New (Reference to Fukushima / H-bomb nuclear pollution > 20 Min)
"Fast-Tracking" - Feb 8, 2014 (Kryon Channelling by Lee Carroll) - New (Reference to Fukushima / H-bomb nuclear pollution > 20 Min)




No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.