MACAU DAILY TIMES 澳門每日時報

Top Menu

  • Our Team
  • Editorial Statute
    • Code of Ethics
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
  • Archive
  • Contacts
  • Extra Times
    • Drive In
    • Book It
    • tTunes
    • Features
    • World of Bacchus
    • Taste of Edesia

Main Menu

  • Home
  • Macau
    • Photo Shop
    • Advertorial
  • Interview
  • Greater Bay
  • Business
    • Corporate Bits
  • China
  • Asia
  • World
  • Sports
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • Our Desk
    • Business Views
    • China Daily
    • Multipolar World
    • The Conversation
    • World Views
  • Our Team
  • Editorial Statute
    • Code of Ethics
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
  • Archive
  • Contacts
  • Extra Times
    • Drive In
    • Book It
    • tTunes
    • Features
    • World of Bacchus
    • Taste of Edesia
Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
logo
FOUNDER & PUBLISHER Kowie Geldenhuys
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Paulo Coutinho
Macau,

MACAU DAILY TIMES 澳門每日時報

  • Home
  • Macau
    • Photo Shop
    • Advertorial
  • Interview
  • Greater Bay
  • Business
    • Corporate Bits
  • China
  • Asia
  • World
  • Sports
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • Our Desk
    • Business Views
    • China Daily
    • Multipolar World
    • The Conversation
    • World Views
  • Road Traffic Law amendments fast-tracked following fatal zebra crossing crash

  • New tobacco law to ban smoking near schools, hospitals and prohibit e-cigarettes

  • Pahiyas Festival brings Filipino heritage and devotion to Macau stage

  • Q1 public cleaning outsourcing sees rise in local hires, drop in jobseekers

  • Maternity leave to rise from 70 to 90 days, with annual leave tied to years of service

  • China’s factory activity slows in May, raising questions over its economy

Features
Home›Extra Times›Features›News of the World | Radiation fears keep Japan’s nuclear refugees from returning

News of the World | Radiation fears keep Japan’s nuclear refugees from returning

By -
March 11, 2016
11
0
Share:
A woman prays for tsunami victims at a makeshift shrine in a neighborhood devastated by the March 11, 2011 earthquake and tsunami on top of Hiyoriyama in Natori, Miyagi Prefecture

A woman prays for tsunami victims at a makeshift shrine in a neighborhood devastated by the March 11, 2011 earthquake and tsunami on top of Hiyoriyama in Natori, Miyagi Prefecture

Tokiko Onoda

Megumi Okada

Tokiko Onoda, 80, lives with her husband in a cramped, cluttered apartment on the 21st floor of a high-rise in the edge of Tokyo where about 1,000 people displaced by the disaster live in rent-free housing.
Several Fukushima towns that were deserted now are urging residents to return, saying it is safe to live in certain areas. An ambitious effort to decontaminate vast swaths of land by removing topsoil and razing shrubbery has turned farmland and coastlines into stretches of dirt with rows upon rows of black garbage bags filled with grass, soil and debris.
When housing aid ends in April 2017, people in apartments under the government program will have to start paying rent or move out. Those whose homes in Fukushima that are in areas still off-limits for living will continue to receive the aid.
Onoda fears hers will be cut off because her home is in Namie, where evacuation orders are gradually being lifted in parts of the town.
She doesn’t believe it’s safe to go back. She feels duped because she had believed that nuclear power was safe.
Onoda angrily talks about how authorities are treating people like her. Why didn’t the government give her land elsewhere to build a new home?
When she lived in Fukushima, she had a big house with a garden where she grew vegetables and peonies. She picked mushrooms and ferns in the hills.
“We worked so hard to build that house,” she said, often stopping to wipe away tears. “We had no worries in the world except to plan vacation trips to the hot springs.”
That home is now in shambles. Although it survived the 9.0 magnitude quake on March 11, 2011, burglars have ransacked it and rats have chewed the walls. The last time she visited, the dosimeter ticked at 4 microsieverts an hour, more than 100 times the average monitored in-air radiation in Tokyo. That’s not immediately life-threatening but it makes Onoda feel uncomfortable because of worries that cancer or other sicknesses may surface years later.
Before the disaster, the government had set the safe annual radiation dosage level at 1 millisievert. Afterward, it has adopted the 20 millisievert recommendation of the International Commission on Radiation Protection set for emergencies, and 1 millisievert became a long-term goal.
Onoda says she has done her best to cope. She has made friends. She keeps busy with tea parties, art classes and a sewing circle.
And now they want her to go back, after all she has gone through?
“Only someone who has gone through this evacuation can understand,” she said.

Ryuichi Kino

Ryuichi Kino

Ryuichi Kino, a journalist who wrote, edited and compiled the 2015 book, “The White Paper on Nuclear Evacuees,” believes people like Onoda have been treated like “kimin,” which means “people who have been discarded” because they have been forgotten or abandoned by society.
“We don’t even know their real numbers,” he said, noting the government lacks a clear definition for “evacuees,” and bases its figures on tallies of those receiving aid. A recent count in Fukushima and a neighboring prefecture found the total number may be as high as 200,000, Kino said.
“Evacuation is a term that assumes the situation is temporary, and there is a place to go back,” said Kino.
The government is spending about 40 billion yen (USD400 million) a year on housing aid for those displaced by the disaster. It’s also financially backing Tokyo Electric Power Co., operator of the damaged Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant, to make monthly compensation payments, now at a cumulative 5.9 trillion yen ($59 billion) and rising.
Tests with volunteers who wore dosimeters for two weeks in the town of Naraha found average radiation exposure to be at a rate of 1.12 millsieverts a year.
Government official Yuji Ishizaki, who is overseeing the lifting of evacuation orders, says he is merely following policy.
“There is no clear boundary for what is safe or not safe for radiation,” he said. “Even 1 millisievert might not be absolutely safe.”
Fukushima Medical University, the main academic body studying the health effects of the nuclear disaster, says no sickness linked to radiation has been detected so far, although sickness from lack of exercise, poor diet and mental stress has been observed.
The more than 100 cases of thyroid cancer found among the 370,000 people 18 years old and younger at the time of the disaster the university calls “a screening effect,” or a result of more rigorous testing.
Some scientists say that is unusually high, given that thyroid cancer among children is rare at two or three in a million. Thyroid cancers among the young surged in the Ukraine and Belarus after the 1986 Chernobyl catastrophe.

Seiichi Nakate is relatively content in his new life with his wife and two children, 13 and 11, in the northern city of Sapporo, 600 kilometers from Fukushima. There, some 1,500 people from Fukushima have formed a support network, often getting together for drinks and helping each other find jobs.
Nakate recently bought a house and started a company that refers professional helpers to disabled people, and has hired former Fukushima residents. He vows to never return to Fukushima because of the radiation danger.
He believes that from the beginning, authorities underplayed those risks. He doesn’t trust them.
After the disaster, he immediately sent his wife and children to a relatives’ home in southern Japan. The family started living together in Sapporo a year later.
The end of government housing support makes people feel pressure to return, he says.
“The government abandoned the people of Fukushima, even the children. Now the policy is to push us to go back,” he said. “It’s a policy that forces radiation upon people.”

Megumi Okada

Megumi Okada

Megumi Okada, a mother of four, is fighting hard to keep her housing aid in Tokyo, getting people to sign petitions and meeting with government officials.
She scoffs at how officials keep saying that people are living “as normal” in much of Fukushima. She doesn’t want her children eating the food or breathing the air. They get periodic blood tests to make sure they are healthy.
Her husband has found a job as a construction worker in Tokyo. Their apartment is just two rooms and a kitchen, but the rent is covered. Okada wants to work, but publicly funded child-care is scarce in Japan, and private ones are costly.
“Nothing has progressed in five years,” she said. “We have the right to stay evacuated.”
Okada says she wants to apply for U.N. refugee status and move to Europe with her family, if she could.
“I know Japanese can’t become refugees now. But I wish we could,” she said. “It is about our staying alive.” Yuri Kageyama, AP, Tokyo

FacebookTweetPin

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X

Like this:

Like Loading…

Related

Previous Article

The Evergreen State

Next Article

Assassin shows versatility on 1st album in ...

0
Shares

    Related articles More from author

    • Features

      Lifestyle | How to choose the right health plan

      November 8, 2019
      By -
    • Features

      Space | Virgin Galactic says it will fly Italian researchers

      October 4, 2019
      By -
    • Features

      News of the world | Pomp and flattery: Asia rolls out the red carpets for Trump

      November 10, 2017
      By -
    • Features

      News of the World | Academy Awards may be hooked on ‘Oscar bait’

      February 26, 2016
      By -
    • Features

      Travelog | Lions kill cattle, so people kill lions. Can the cycle end?

      October 11, 2019
      By -
    • Features

      Travelog | In the wake of Viking explorers, a North Atlantic cruise

      February 3, 2017
      By -

    Leave a reply Cancel reply

    You must be logged in to post a comment.

    • Uncategorized

      1989 Protests force out East German rulers

    • Forum

      Angola | Banking sector grows by 16pct in 2016, Deloitte says

    • World

      Mystery meat | Was it really woolly mammoth on the menu?

    DAILY EDITION

    Monday, June 1, 2026 – edition no. 4961
    Monday, June 1, 2026 – edition no. 4961

    Greater Bay

    MDT MACAU GRAND PRIX SPECIAL

    June 2026
    M T W T F S S
    1234567
    891011121314
    15161718192021
    22232425262728
    2930  
    « May    

    Timeline

    • June 1, 2026

      Road Traffic Law amendments fast-tracked following fatal zebra crossing crash

    • June 1, 2026

      New tobacco law to ban smoking near schools, hospitals and prohibit e-cigarettes

    • June 1, 2026

      Pahiyas Festival brings Filipino heritage and devotion to Macau stage

    • June 1, 2026

      Q1 public cleaning outsourcing sees rise in local hires, drop in jobseekers

    • June 1, 2026

      Maternity leave to rise from 70 to 90 days, with annual leave tied to years of service

    • June 1, 2026

      China’s factory activity slows in May, raising questions over its economy

    • June 1, 2026

      Methamphetamine tops drug use in 2025

    • June 1, 2026

      Gov’t expands green energy push with new EV charging and solar plans

    • June 1, 2026

      Hotel occupancy rises to 90.2% in April

    • June 1, 2026

      Electronic payments rise as retail spending leads growth

    Recent Posts

    Drive InExtra Times

    A classic battle epic in ‘The Woman King’

    Viola Davis should have been leading armies this whole time. In “ The Woman King,” the always regal Oscar-winner is a mass of muscle, battle wounds and world weariness as ...
    • Basel dazzle

      By -
      March 20, 2015
    • Book It | New collection of columns by the late Jenny Diski

      By -
      April 23, 2021
    • Clooney gets a conscience in ‘Money Monster’

      By -
      May 13, 2016
    • Author Alison Gaylin delivers stunning story

      By -
      February 26, 2016
    • Recent

    • Popular

    • Road Traffic Law amendments fast-tracked following fatal zebra crossing crash

      By Yuki Lei, MDT
      June 1, 2026
    • New tobacco law to ban smoking near schools, hospitals and prohibit e-cigarettes

      By Yuki Lei, MDT
      June 1, 2026
    • Pahiyas Festival brings Filipino heritage and devotion to Macau stage

      By Ricaela Diputado, MDT
      June 1, 2026
    • Q1 public cleaning outsourcing sees rise in local hires, drop in jobseekers

      By -
      June 1, 2026
    • Maternity leave to rise from 70 to 90 days, with annual leave tied to years ...

      By Yuki Lei, MDT
      June 1, 2026
    • China’s factory activity slows in May, raising questions over its economy

      By -
      June 1, 2026
    • Methamphetamine tops drug use in 2025

      By -
      June 1, 2026
    • Canidrome may have its days numbered, decision in ‘one or two months’

      By Paulo Coutinho, MDT
      May 26, 2016
    • Animal Welfare | Macau: Anima slams Canidrome management for avoiding debate

      By -
      May 4, 2016
    • Editorial | Canidoomed

      By Paulo Coutinho, MDT
      June 1, 2016
    • Animal Welfare | Canidrome presented with ultimatum: close or move

      By Daniel Beitler, MDT
      July 22, 2016
    • Australia regulator cracks down on alleged exportation of dogs to Macau

      By Paulo Coutinho, MDT
      June 10, 2016
    • USE OF ENGLISH IN MACAU | A ‘de facto’ official language

      By Catarina Pinto
      July 6, 2015
    • Animal rights | Canidrome: Anima in fresh airline negotiations as Canidrome closure looks more likely

      By Daniel Beitler, MDT
      May 27, 2016
    • Contact our Administrator
    • Contact our Editor-in-Chief
    • Contacts
    • Our Team
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Editorial Statute
    • Code of Ethics
    COPYRIGHT © MACAU DAILY TIMES 2008-2026. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
    MACAU DAILY TIMES
    • Home
    • Macau
      • Photo Shop
      • Advertorial
    • Interview
    • Greater Bay
    • Business
      • Corporate Bits
    • China
    • Asia
    • World
    • Sports
    • Opinion
      • Editorial
      • Our Desk
      • Business Views
      • China Daily
      • Multipolar World
      • The Conversation
      • World Views
    • Our Team
    • Editorial Statute
      • Code of Ethics
      • Privacy Policy
      • Terms and Conditions
    • Archive
    • Contacts
    • Extra Times
      • Drive In
      • Book It
      • tTunes
      • Features
      • World of Bacchus
      • Taste of Edesia

    Loading Comments...

    You must be logged in to post a comment.

      %d