Japan
Reacts to Fukushima Crisis By Banning Journalism
George
Washington
27
November, 2013
2
weeks after the Fukushima accident, we reported that the government
responded to the nuclear accident by trying to raise
acceptable radiation levels and pretending that radiation is good for
us.
Japan
will likely pass a new anti-whistleblowing law in an attempt to
silence
criticism of Tepco and the government:
Japanese
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s government is planning a state secrets
act that critics say could curtail
public access to information on
a wide range of issues, including tensions with China and the
Fukushima nuclear crisis.
The
new law would dramatically expand the definition of official secrets
and journalists convicted under it could be jailed for up to five
years.
Associated
Press,
Nov. 26, 2013: Japan’s more powerful lower house of Parliament
approved a state secrecy bill late Tuesday [...] Critics say it might
sway authorities to withhold more information about nuclear power
plants [...] The move is welcomed by the United States [...] lawyer
Hiroyasu Maki said the bill’s definition of secrets is so vague and
broad that it could easily be expanded to include radiation data
[...] Journalists who obtain information “inappropriately” or
“wrongfully” can get up to five years in prison, prompting
criticism that it would make officials more secretive and intimidate
the media. Attempted leaks or inappropriate reporting, complicity or
solicitation are also considered illegal. [...] Japan’s proposed
law also designates the prime minister as a third-party overseer.
BBC,
Nov. 26, 2013: Japan approves new state secrecy bill to combat leaks
[...] The bill now goes to the upper house, where it is also likely
to be passed.
The
Australian,
Nov. 25, 2013: Japanese press baulks at push for ‘fascist’
secrecy laws [...] Taro Yamamoto [an upper house lawmaker] said the
law threatened to recreate a fascist state in Japan. “This secrecy
law represents a coup d’etat by a particular group of politicians
and bureaucrats,” he told a press conference in Tokyo. “I believe
the secrecy bill will eventually lead to the repression of the
average person. It will allow those in power to crack down on anyone
who is criticising them – the path we are on is the recreation of a
fascist state.” He said the withholding of radiation data after the
Fukushima disaster showed the Japanese government was predisposed to
hiding information from its citizens and this law would only make
things worse. [...] The Asahi Shimbun newspaper likened the law to
“conspiracy” regulations in pre-war Japan and said it could be
used to stymie access to facts on nuclear accidents [...]
Foreign
Correspondents’ Club of Japan president Lucy Birmingham: “We are
alarmed by the text of the bill, as well as associated statements
made by some ruling party lawmakers, relating to the potential
targeting of journalists for prosecution and imprisonment.”
Activist
Kazuyuki Tokune: “I may be arrested some day for my anti-nuclear
activity [...] But that doesn’t stop me.”
Lawrence
Repeta, a law professor at Meiji University in Tokyo: “This is a
severe threat on freedom to report in Japan [...] It appears the Abe
administration has decided that they can get a lot of what they want,
which is to escape oversight, to decrease transparency in the
government by passing a law that grants the government and officials
broad authority to designate information as secret.”
U.S.
Charge d’Affairs Kurt Tong: It’s a positive step that would make
Japan a “more effective alliance partner.”
Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe: “This law is designed to protect the safety of
the people.”
Unfortunately,
the United States is no better. Specifically, the American
government:
- Censors journalists who raise inconvenient truths
- Pressured the Japanese government to re-start its nuclear program, and is allowing Fukushima seafood to be sold in the U.S.
- Weakened safety standards for U.S. nuclear reactors after the Fukushima disaster
American
and Canadian
authorities have virtually stopped monitoring airborne radiation, and
are not testing fish for radiation. (Indeed, the EPA reacted to
Fukushima by raising
“acceptable” radiation levels.)
***
The
failure of the American, Canadian and other governments to test for
and share results is making it difficult to hold an open scientific
debate about what is happening.
Earlier
this year, the acting EPA director signed
a revised version of the EPA’s Protective Action Guide for
radiological incidents, which radically relaxing the safety
guidelines agencies follow in the wake of a nuclear-reactor meltdown
or other unexpected release of radiation. EPA whistleblowers
called
it
“a public health policy only Dr. Strangelove could embrace.”
As
we noted
right after Fukushima happened, this is standard
operating procedure for government
these days:
When
the economy imploded in 2008, how did the government respond?
Did
it crack down on fraud? Force bankrupt companies to admit that their
speculative gambling with our money had failed? Rein in the funny
business?
Of
course not!
The
government just helped cover up how bad things were, used claims of
national security to keep everything in the dark, and changed basic
rules and definitions to allow the game to continue. See this,
this,
this
and this.
When
BP – through criminal negligence
– blew out the Deepwater Horizon oil well, the government helped
cover it up
(the cover
up is ongoing).
The
government also changed
the testing standards for seafood
to pretend that higher levels of toxic
PAHs
in our food was business-as-usual.
So
now that Japan is suffering the worst nuclear accident since
Chernobyl – if not of all time – is the government riding to the
rescue to help fix the problem, or at least to provide accurate
information to its citizens so they can make informed decisions?
Of
course not!
Indeed,
some government scientists and media shills are now “reexamining”
old studies that show that radioactive substances like plutonium
cause cancer to argue that they help prevent
cancer.
It
is not just bubbleheads like Ann
Coulter
saying this. Government scientists from the Pacific
Northwest National Laboratories
and pro-nuclear
hacks
like Lawrence
Solomon
are saying this. [Update.]
In
other words, this is a concerted propaganda campaign to cover up the
severity of a major nuclear accident by raising acceptable levels of
radiation and saying that a little radiation is good for us.
Any
time the results of bad government policy is revealed, the government
just covers
it up rather than changing the policy.
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