They
always said nuclear power would lead to a police state
---Helen
Caldicott
Japan’s
Deadly New ‘Fukushima Fascism’
Fukushima
continues to spew out radiation. The quantities seem to be rising, as
do the impacts
Harvey
Wasserman
12
December, 2013
.
The
site has been infiltrated by organized crime. There are horrifying
signs of ecological disaster in the Pacific and human health impacts
in the U.S.
But
within Japan, a new State Secrets Act makes such talk punishable by
up to ten years in prison.
Taro
Yamamoto, a Japanese legislator, says the law “represents a coup
d’etat” leading to “the recreation of a fascist state.” The
powerful Asahi Shimbun newspaper compares it to “conspiracy” laws
passed by totalitarian Japan in the lead-up to Pearl Harbor, and
warns it could end independent reporting on Fukushima.
Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe has been leading Japan in an increasingly
militaristic direction. Tensions have increased with China. Massive
demonstrations have been renounced with talk of “treason.”
But
it’s Fukushima that hangs most heavily over the nation and the
world.
Tokyo
Electric Power has begun the bring-down of hot fuel rods suspended
high in the air over the heavily damaged Unit Four. The first
assemblies it removed may have contained unused rods. The second may
have been extremely radioactive.
But
Tepco has clamped down on media coverage and complains about news
helicopters filming the fuel rod removal.
Under
the new State Secrets Act, the government could ban—and arrest—all
independent media under any conditions at Fukushima, throwing a
shroud of darkness over a disaster that threatens us all.
By
all accounts, whatever clean-up is possible will span decades. The
town of Fairfax, CA, has now called for a global takeover at
Fukushima. More than 150,000 signees have asked the UN for such
intervention.
As
a private corporation, Tepco is geared to cut corners, slash wages
and turn the clean-up into a private profit center.
It
will have ample opportunity. The fuel pool at Unit Four poses huge
dangers that could take years to sort out. But so do the ones at
Units One, Two and Three. The site overall is littered with thousands
of intensely radioactive rods and other materials whose potential
fallout is thousands of times greater than what hit Hiroshima in
1945.
Soon
after the accident, Tepco slashed the Fukushima workforce. It has
since restored some of it, but has cut wages. Shady contractors
shuttle in hundreds of untrained laborers to work in horrific
conditions. Reuters says the site is heaving infiltrated by organized
crime, raising the specter of stolen radioactive materials for dirty
bombs and more.
Thousands
of tons of radioactive water now sit in leaky tanks built by
temporary workers who warn of their shoddy construction. They are
sure to collapse with a strong earthquake.
Tepco
says it may just dump the excess water into the Pacific anyway.
Nuclear expert Arjun Makhijani has advocated the water be stored in
supertankers until it can be treated, but the suggestion has been
ignored.
Hundreds
of tons of water also flow daily from the mountains through the
contaminated site and into the Pacific. Nuclear engineer Arnie
Gundersen long ago asked Tepco to dig a trench filled with absorbents
to divert that flow. But he was told that would cost too much money.
Now
Tepco wants to install a wall of ice. But that can’t be built for
at least two years. It’s unclear where the energy to keep the wall
frozen will come from, or if it would work at all.
Meanwhile,
radiation is now reaching record levels in both the air and water.
The
fallout has been already been detected off the coast of Alaska. It
will cycle down along the west coast of Canada and the U.S. to
northern Mexico by the end of 2014. Massive disappearances of sea
lion pups, sardines, salmon, killer whales and other marine life are
being reported, along with a terrifying mass disintegration of star
fish. One sailor has documented a massive “dead zone” out 2,000
miles from Fukushima. Impacts on humans have already been documented
in California and elsewhere.
Without
global intervention, long-lived isotopes from Fukushima will continue
to pour into the biosphere for decades to come.
The
only power now being produced at Fukushima comes from a massive new
windmill just recently installed offshore.
Amidst
a disaster it can’t handle, the Japanese government is still
pushing to re-open the 50 reactors forced shut since the melt-downs.
It wants to avoid public fallout amidst a terrified population, and
on the 2020 Olympics, scheduled for a Tokyo region now laced with
radioactive hot spots. At least one on-site camera has stopped
functioning. The government has also apparently stopped
helicopter-based radiation monitoring.
A
year ago a Japanese professor was detained 20 days without trial for
speaking out against the open-air incineration of radioactive waste.
Now
Prime Minister Abe can do far worse. The Times of India reports that
the State Secrets Act is unpopular, and that Abe’s approval ratings
have dropped with its passage.
But
the new law may make Japan’s democracy a relic of its pre-Fukushima
past.
It’s
the cancerous mark of a nuclear regime bound to control all knowledge
of a lethal global catastrophe now ceaselessly escalating.
Government
takes another stab at unpopular 'conspiracy' legislation
The
government is seeking to rejuvenate decade-old legislation to make
the act of “conspiracy” a punishable crime, even if no criminal
act has been committed.
12
December, 2013
Word
of the move sparked revived criticism that such a law could lead to
prosecution against civil advocacy groups for the mere act of
communicating. Even members of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s
administration questioned the need for a conspiracy law.
Chief
Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told reporters on Dec. 11 that
government would not try to advance the measure during the next Diet
session, which starts in January.
But
government officials say the legislation is needed in part to bolster
police powers to fight terrorism before Tokyo hosts the 2020 Summer
Olympic Games. The event will draw huge crowds from around the world
and is seen as an inviting target for terrorists.
The
legislation is also seen as a key law enforcement tool to fight
organized crime. It would penalize mere complicity in plots to commit
serious criminal acts in an “organized” way as part of
“activities of a group.”
“Conspiracy
legislation is a necessity from a global perspective in the light of
the (United Nations) Convention Against Transnational Organized
Crime," a senior government official said Dec. 11. “We have
always been discussing the issue, which is an international
requisite.”
The
Diet has voted in favor of signing the U.N. convention, which was
adopted by the world body in 2000. However, Japan says it needs its
own domestic law covering acts of conspiracy before it can sign the
convention.
Bills
to strengthen current laws have been submitted on three occasions to
the Diet since 2003. But protests by the general public and
opposition parties have forced lawmakers to abandon the legislation
each time.
The
legislation would criminalize acts of conspiracy regarding more than
600 types of crimes, even if they have not been committed. Critics
are also concerned over potential abuse of the law by authorities.
The
Abe administration came under heavy fire for steamrolling the state
secrets protection bill through the Diet earlier this month. The
approval ratings for Abe’s Cabinet dropped across the board in
surveys conducted by various media organizations after the law was
enacted.
That
led the prime minister’s office to reject calls by some in his
administration to submit a conspiracy bill, or a set of bills to
amend related laws, during the next Diet session. The Abe
administration instead plans to take its time to discuss the issue
and lay out its argument for the conspiracy legislation.
But
criticism runs deep.
“The
state secrets protection law, conspiracy legislation and the
wiretapping law are all part of a single package,” said lawyer
Yuichi Kaido. “Once the conspiracy legislation is enacted, the
government could next seek to expand the law to allow wiretapping to
clamp down on conspiracy.”
Yoshitomo
Ode, a Tokyo Keizai University professor and an expert in the
Criminal Procedure Law, also voiced concerns.
“Making
uncommitted acts of crime eligible for punishment would very likely
engender false charges in a manner that is expedient to investigative
authorities,” Ode said.
Even
an aide to Abe said Japan does not need conspiracy legislation.
“We
have to strive to let foreigners know that Japan is such a safe and
secure country,” the aide said.
A
senior administration official said, “I believe the state secrets
protection law is necessary, but conspiracy legislation would have a
more direct impact on the general public.”
The
Liberal Democratic Party’s platform for the December 2012 Lower
House election made no direct mention of conspiracy legislation.
The
only reference that can be construed as similar stated, “We will
bolster measures to fight organized crime, including crackdowns on
cross-border crime rings.”
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.