They feel like refugees, although they live in one of the world’s richest and most peaceful nations.
Five years ago, on March 11, 2011, these people fled their homes, grabbing what they could, as a nearby nuclear plant melted down after being hit by a tsunami, spewing radiation. All told, the disaster in Fukushima displaced 150,000 by the government’s count.
About 100,000 are still scattered around the nation, some in barrack-like temporary housing units and others in government-allocated apartment buildings hundreds of kilometers away.
Although authorities have started to open up areas near the damaged reactors that were previously off limits, only a fraction of residents have returned. For example, in the town of Naraha, where evacuation orders were lifted in September, 459 people, or 6 percent of the pre-disaster population, have gone back.
Most say they don’t want to return for fear of lingering radiation. Some don’t want the upheaval of moving again after trying to start their lives over elsewhere.
With government housing aid set to end next year, many feel pressured to move back.
* Movies: Eye in the Sky
* Books: The Swans of Fifth Avenue by Melanie Benjamin
* Music: Theory of Reggaetivity by Assassin
* Wine: The Evergreen State
* Food: Tea Appreciation and Culinary Finesse
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Extra 2515 – Five years ago in Fukushima | Lost in radiation
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