Nuclear refugees tell of distrust, pressure to return to Fukushima
Source: Associated Press
They feel like refugees, although they live in one of the worlds richest and most peaceful nations.
Five years ago, these people fled their homes, grabbing what they could, as a nearby nuclear plant melted down after being hit by tsunami, spewing radiation. All told, the disaster in Fukushima displaced 150,000 by the governments count.
About 100,000 are still scattered around the nation, some in barrack-like temporary housing units and others in government-allocated apartment buildings hundreds of kilometers away.
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Ryuichi Kino, a journalist who wrote, edited and compiled the 2015 book, The White Paper on Nuclear Evacuees, believes people like Onoda have been treated like kimin, which means people who have been discarded because they have been forgotten or abandoned by society.
We dont even know their real numbers, he said, noting the government lacks a clear definition for evacuees, and bases its figures on tallies of those receiving aid. A recent count in Fukushima and a neighboring prefecture found the total number may be as high as 200,000, Kino said.
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Read more: http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2016/03/11/national/nuclear-refugees-tell-distrust-pressure-return-fukushima/