Japanese
Journalist: Fukushima workers die suddenly but it’s not reported,
says nurse at plant
Gov’t agents following me for surveillance
21 March,
2014
Fukushima
Voice,
Mar. 21, 2014: On March 4-7, 2014 [...] an international
conference was
held, 25 minutes outside of Frankfurt, on “Effects of Nuclear
Disasters on Natural Environment and Human Health,” co-organized by
the German chapter of the International Physicians for Prevention of
Nuclear War (IPPNW) and the Protestant Church in Hesse and Nassau.
Mako Oshidori, a Japanese comedienne and a freelance journalist, was
part of the press conference on March 6, 2014. The Ustream video in
Japanese can be found here [...]
Mako Oshidori was enrolled in the School of Life Sciences at Tottori
University Faculty of Medicine for three years [...] Mako Oshidori
herself discovered a TEPCO
memo telling
officials to “cut Mako-chan(‘s question) short appropriately.”
Transcript
of Oshidori’s presentation by Fukushima Voice,
Transcription by Takashi Mizuno/Translation by @YuriHiranuma,
Mar. 21, 2014: [...] government agents began following me for
surveillance. I heard about it from researchers who were my friends
as well as some government officials. I will show you a photo I
secretly took of the agent, so you know what sort of surveillance I
mean. When I would talk to someone, a surveillance agent from the
central government’s public police force would come very close,
trying to eavesdrop on the conversation. [...] I would like to talk a
little about my interview of a nurse who used to work at Fukushima
Daiichi nuclear power plant (NPP) after the accident. [...] He was a
nurse at Fukushima Daiichi NPP in 2012. He quit his job with TEPCO in
2013, and that’s when I interviewed him. As of now, there are
multiple NPP workers who have died, but only the ones who died on the
job are reported publicly. Some of them have died suddenly while off
work, for instance, during the weekend or in their sleep, but none of
their deaths are reported. Not only that, they are not included in
the worker death count. For example, there are some workers who quit
the job after a lot of radiation exposure, such as 50, 60 to 70 mSv,
and end up dying a month later, but none of these deaths are either
reported, or included in the death toll. This is the reality of the
NPP workers.
(CC)Fukushima
Fallout: Ailing U.S. Sailors Sue TEPCO After Exposure to Radiation
P1-2
Fukushima
Fallout: Ailing U.S. Sailors Sue TEPCO After Exposure to Radiation
30x Higher Than Normal
Three years after the triple meltdown at the Fukushima nuclear power plant, scores of U.S. sailors and marines are suing the plant's operator, the Tokyo Electric Power Company, for allegedly misleading the Navy about the level of radioactive contamination. Many of the servicemembers who provided humanitarian relief during the disaster have experienced devastating health ailments since returning from Japan, ranging from leukemia to blindness to infertility to birth defects. We are joined by three guests: Lieutenant Steve Simmons, a U.S. Navy sailor who served on board the USS Ronald Reagan and joined in the class action lawsuit against TEPCO after suffering health problems; Charles Bonner, an attorney for the sailors; and Kyle Cleveland, sociology professor and associate director of the Institute for Contemporary Asian Studies at Temple University's Japan campus in Tokyo. Cleveland recently published transcripts of the Navy's phone conversations about Fukushima that took place at the time of the disaster, which suggest commanders were also aware of the risk faced by sailors on the USS Ronald Reagan.
Three years after the triple meltdown at the Fukushima nuclear power plant, scores of U.S. sailors and marines are suing the plant's operator, the Tokyo Electric Power Company, for allegedly misleading the Navy about the level of radioactive contamination. Many of the servicemembers who provided humanitarian relief during the disaster have experienced devastating health ailments since returning from Japan, ranging from leukemia to blindness to infertility to birth defects. We are joined by three guests: Lieutenant Steve Simmons, a U.S. Navy sailor who served on board the USS Ronald Reagan and joined in the class action lawsuit against TEPCO after suffering health problems; Charles Bonner, an attorney for the sailors; and Kyle Cleveland, sociology professor and associate director of the Institute for Contemporary Asian Studies at Temple University's Japan campus in Tokyo. Cleveland recently published transcripts of the Navy's phone conversations about Fukushima that took place at the time of the disaster, which suggest commanders were also aware of the risk faced by sailors on the USS Ronald Reagan.
Part two
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