Reuters
Special: Workers are tricked into being on front lines at Fukushima
plant
“You
can’t escape” — “They kept me in a shed” — “There’s
nowhere else to go… Everyone is stuck” — “You’re
brainwashed” — “After a few days, they’re thrown away”
25
October, 2013
Reuters, Oct. 25, 2013: Special Report: Help wanted in Fukushima: Low pay, high risks and gangsters [...] Tetsuya Hayashi [...] was recruited for a job monitoring the radiation exposure of workers leaving the plant in the summer of 2012. Instead [he was assigned] to one of Fukushima’s hottest radiation zones. He was told he would have to wear an oxygen tank and a double-layer protective suit. Even then, his handlers told him, the radiation would be so high it could burn through his annual exposure limit in just under an hour. “I felt cheated and entrapped,” Hayashi said. “I had not agreed to any of this.” When Hayashi took his grievances to a firm on the next rung up the ladder of Fukushima contractors, he says he was fired. […]
Reuters
Video: Fukushima
worker exploitation
Anonymous Fukushima nuclear plant worker: I was told to clean up tsunami rubble, but then I was told to go to ‘1F’ (Fukushima Daiichi) […] at first I didn’t have a place to live, I didn’t have anything. It was like a bad comic book. They kept me in a prefab shed, like somewhere you keep tools. I was there for around 3 weeks with one sleeping bag. I was told I could just work in normal clothes. But I arrived and was put into a full protective suit. I was very confused. […] But there’s nowhere else to go, there’s nowhere to eat. Everyone is stuck like that.
Testuya Hayashi, former Fukushima nuclear plant worker: The ads say it’s completely safe, that the radiation is low. Then once you’ve signed all the papers and you can’t escape you find out actually you’re going in a highly radioactive area. […] Workers on the front lines are tricked into going there. After a few days, they’re thrown away. Then the companies lie and recruit more workers. […] You get told it’s no big deal […] so you start thinking maybe it’s alright. You’re brainwashed, bit by bit.
Fukushima
whistleblower exposes yakuza connections, exploitation of cleanup
workers
Revelations
from a Fukushima cleanup worker-turned-whistleblower have exposed the
plant’s chaotic system of subcontractors, their alleged mafia
connections and the super-exploitation of indigent workers doing this
dangerous work.
RT,
25
October, 2013
The
allegations, contained in an investigative report by Reuters, have
also exposed deeply-rooted problems within Japan’s nuclear industry
as a whole. In the report, detailing the everyday realities of
workers at the stricken facility, Reuters interviewed an estimated 80
casual workers and managers. The most common complaint voiced was the
cleanup effort’s utter dependence on subcontractors – which it is
alleged endangered not just workers’ rights, but also their lives.
Tetsuya
Hayashi, a 41-tyear-old construction worker by trade, applied for a
job at the stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, after he
suspected that the plant was in deeper trouble than it was willing to
admit. The $150 billion cleanup effort, which is expected to last
several decades into the future, has already required up to 50,000,
mostly casual workers.
However,
Hayashi only lasted two weeks on the job, as it became apparent that
the vast network of subcontractors involved in the cleanup efforts
could not care less for his rights (or his health), while Tokyo
Electric Power Co (TEPCO), the plant’s operator, was doing little
except giving subcontractors a slap on the wrist.
Hired
to monitor the exposure to radiation of plant workers leaving the job
during the summer of 2012, Hayashi was assigned to the most
bio-hazardous sector and given a protective anti-radiation suit.
However, even with the suit on, we exceeded his safe annual radiation
quota in less than an hour.
The
subcontractor who hired Hayashi was not following nuclear safety
rules, according to exposure guidelines by the International Atomic
Energy Agency, Reuters reported.
Furthermore,
after Hayashi’s first two-week period of employment, he suspected
that his passbook, a document showing the extent of a worker’s
exposure to radiation, had been falsified by his employer, RH Kogyo,
to reflect that he had been hired by a company higher up on the
contractor food chain. The passbook shows that Suzushi Kogyo employed
him from May to June 2012, while another firm, Take One, employed him
for a brief 10 days in June. The truth was that RH Kogyo had given
him a one-year contract.
"My
suspicion is that they falsified the records to hide the fact that
they had outsourced my employment,"Reuters reported Hayashi
as saying.
The
above was the start of his troubles.
"I
felt cheated and entrapped…I had not agreed to any of
this," Hayashi told the news agency.
After complaining to a higher-level contractor, Hayashi was fired. When he complained to labor regulators, his plea went unanswered for a year. He landed another job at the plant, building a concrete foundation for the cooling tanks used to hold nuclear fuel rods.
Workers wearing protective suits and
masks are seen next to the No.4 reactor at Tokyo Electric Power
Company's (TEPCO) tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power
plant in Fukushima prefecture (Reuters/Issei Kato)
Critics
of the plant’s cleanup say that this unregulated hiring of workers
through subcontractors opens them to the risk of rights violations,
extortion and blackmail from organized crime syndicates. But the
lawyers of workers from around the Fukushima prefecture say that even
that is a good deal compared to being unemployed.
While
neither the eight main subcontractors nor the plant’s operator
could be reached for comment on Hayashi’s case, TEPCO’s general
manager for nuclear power, Masayuki Ono, told Reuters that the
company “[signs] contracts with companies based on the cost
needed to carry out a task… the companies then hire their own
employees taking into account our contract. It’s very difficult for
us to go in and check their contracts.”
After
being advised by a journalist, Hayashi claims to have kept copies of
his work records, including pictures and videos to back up his story.
A
worker shortage crisis continues to deepen at the same time – both
inside the plant throughout the surrounding Fukushima prefecture.
Government data suggests that the number of job openings exceeds the
number of applicants by 25 percent.
But
despite research suggesting that raising the wages could bolster
employment, TEPCO remains under pressure from the government to boost
profits by March 2014. In response, the power utility has cutting
workers’ wages at the plant by 20 percent.
In
this race to the bottom over workers’ rights and pay, many
subcontractors with allegedly questionable connections gained control
of the impoverished Fukushima prefecture’s market for cleanup jobs.
It is those companies that have taken advantage of the staggering
shortage of cleanup workers and allowed companies associated with the
plant with alleged ties with Japan’s organized crime syndicates,
the yakuza, to flourish. And there are close to 50 gangs affiliated
with three major syndicates in the prefecture alone – a fact that
had an effect on the local labor market long before the tragedy of
March 2011.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe (L)
sees off workers leaving for a patrol of tanks containing
radioactive water after greeting them at the emergency operation
center of the Tokyo Electric Power Co. (AFP Photo/Japan Pooll)
A
survey earlier this year revealed that close to 70 percent of small
firms provided with decontamination work contracts did not follow
labor regulations. The fact was reported by the labor ministry in
July.
But
Japanese Economy Minister Toshimitsu Motegi, who is in charge of
decommissioning the plant, has claimed that he can only go so far in
telling TEPCO to improve workers’ conditions. "To get
work done, it's necessary to cooperate with a large number of
companies," he said.
When
a police task force was set up to target criminal involvement in the
cleanup efforts, huge amounts of money were found to have been
embezzled. But akin to TEPCO’s apparent inability to supervise any
activities outside its own immediate agreement with the government, a
spokesman for Obayashi, one of the Big Four, claimed that the
corporation “did not notice” that one of its subcontractors was
hiring workers from the yakuza.
Obayashi
pointed instead to its deals with subcontractors, in which they “have
clauses on not cooperating with organized crime.”
Fukushima reliant on cheap labor
TEPCO
is also finding that decommissioning Fukushima is a particularly
cumbersome task and a nightmare to oversee. The cooling system alone
requires thousands of workers to daily maintain its operation, and
has to deal with the equivalent of 130 Olympic-sized stadiums full of
contaminated water each day. A total of 12,000 workers will need to
be hired before 2015, TEPCO forecasts. That is in comparison to
slightly more than 8,000 workers currently registered at the plant.
Recently that number was 6,000.
Making
things even more complicated, the problems faced by Fukushima’s
chaotic labor market have their roots dating back all to the 1970s.
Japan’s
nuclear industry has been relying on cheap labor for over four
decades, often recruiting workers from impoverished areas around
Tokyo and Osaka, which are awash with indigent men seeking
employment. Hayashi is but one of an estimated 50,000 workers hired
so far for the clean-up. These indigent workers, known colloquially
as “nuclear gypsies,” are easy targets for
subcontractors looking to hire workers on the cheap.
“Working
conditions in the nuclear industry have always been bad,” Reuters
cited Saburo Murata, deputy director of Osaka’s Chuo Hospital, as
saying. “Problems
with money, outsourced recruitment, lack of proper health insurance -
these have existed for decades.”
And
the fallout from the March 2011 Fukushima disaster only serves to
highlight these long-standing issues.
In
the aftermath of the catastrophe, Japan’s parliament agreed to
direct funds for the facility’s decontamination and closing. But
the bill failed to include existing regulations applied to the
construction industry. This detail meant that contractors supplying
casual workers were not required to disclose their management
practices or be subject to any background checks. Consequently,
anyone could become a nuclear contractor, with neither TEPCO nor the
government any the wiser.
Workers wearing protective suits and
masks are seen next to the spent fuel pool inside the Common Pool
Building, where all the nuclear fuel rods will be stored for
decommissioning, at the Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO)
tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in the town
of Okuma, Fukushima prefecture (AFP Photo/Issei Kato)
In
some cases, workers in debt to the yakuza would be hired, with
brokers deducting their debts direct from their wage packets –
often brown envelopes. What would follow was labor at sharply reduced
wages, as the men worked tirelessly to pay back the brokers that
hired them. The wages they were promised in the beginning are
one-third below the national average. TEPCO does not publish its
hourly rates, prompting Reuters to raise the issue with the workers
themselves. Averaging $12 an hour, pay can dip as low as $6.
Speaking
to Reuters, Lake Barrett, a former US nuclear regulator and an
advisor to TEPCO, said that changing the system quickly would be
impossible.
"There's
been a century of tradition of big Japanese companies using
contractors, and that's just the way it is in Japan… you’re not
going to change that overnight just because you have a new job here,
so I think you have to adapt.”
In
other cases, workers have been known to be employed by one
contractor, while managed by another. Workers complained to one court
that they had been packed in small rooms, given their daily bowls of
rice and – following a road accident, to get rid of their work
uniforms and find separate hospitals to take care of them. And
despite almost no oversight and widespread claims of gross rights
violations, no company has yet been penalized.
A worker screened for radiation as he
enters the emergency operation center at Tokyo Electric Power Co.
(TEPCO)'s tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in
Fukushima prefecture (Reuters/Issei Kato)
Stories like the one Hayashi told have led to the emergence of worker rights’ groups, such as the one he is now involved in. "Major contractors that run this system think that workers will always be afraid to talk because they are scared to lose their jobs,” he explained. “But Japan can’t continue to ignore this problem forever.”
The
revelations come on the heels of a string of mishaps at the troubled
plant – some natural, others caused by human error. The cleanup has
a upcoming operation in November – by far the riskiest to date. It
will involve the extraction of 1,300 spent nuclear fuel rods from the
cooling tanks suspended 18 meters above ground. The task will require
absolutely precise coordination from all workers at the power plant,
as each rod will be handled manually, not by a computer, as many of
the rods are now tilted at an angle or not in their previous
location. Any mistake, or a failure to move the rods without
collisions, could result in a catastrophe bigger than Chernobyl, says
Christopher Busby, an expert on the health effects of ionizing
radiation and Scientific Secretary of the European Committee on
Radiation Risk. The combined radioactive yield of the fuel rods is
more than that of the nuclear bomb dropped on Hiroshima.
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