No-Go
Zone: Govt lets people home despite Fukushima radiation alarm
In
Japan, a group of government officials has decided to come clean and
admit that residents of Fukushima may never return to their homes.
They say that radiation levels there cannot be brought back to normal
any time soon and are urging the leadership to abandon its promise to
make the area fit for living in. But only a handful of those
residents actually want to go back - more than two years after an
earthquake and tsunami crippled the Daiichi nuclear power plant.
Japan
To Send Residents Home To Nuclear Wasteland
By
Susan Duclos
16
November, 2013
The
town is a “nuclear
wasteland”
and 20 year old photographer, Dylan Pukall captured
what can only be described as heartbreaking but telling photos of a
Fukushima no-go zone, where he says “It was so silent that the
birds seemed too loud,” and called it “spooky… eerie.”
The
radiation levels inside these no-go zones is below danger levels,
so the Japanese government is promising people can go home,
despite scientists saying that it is “suicidal,” because
radiation migrates and exists in hotspots....[ ]
.....Consider
that 27 years later, the Chernobyl exclusion zone is still empty, as
the photos
publish here
from April 2013 clearly shows.
Also
consider the health effects such as as data on stillbirths,
spontaneous abortions, cancers, and more since 3/11 is still
being hidden by the Japanese government,
just 30 months after the Fukushima meltdown.
With
the Chernobyl example and the health effects, why would the Japanese
government even consider letting people back into the no-go zones
when it is clear they should be evacuating even more zones and
widening the area of danger to protect their people?
Related
- Fukushima:
Fuel Already “Very Close To Going Critical” At Unit 4, Reactor 1
Has Ruptured (Video)
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