Arama They Didn't

3:54 pm - 06/24/2012

Protesting Against the Restart of Nuclear Reactors



Protestors holding mock funeral portraits of Prime Minister Noda and other ministers directly involved in the negotiations concerning nuclear power.

Although from far away it might look like a gay pride rally what with all the rainbow signage going on, one of the bigger news stories as of late has been protests against Noda giving the OK to proceed with the restart of nuclear reactors.

Organized almost completely by Twitter and other social network campaigning, more and more people are coming out to show their support of the protest. This is surprising not only because of the issue itself, but because it's such a rare act for Japanese people to come together like this in opposition to government decision-making.

The voices of the protestors from outside could be heard echoing strongly from within the building, which makes the cry of the people hard to ignore.

I wish I could find an article that showcased excerpts from actual protestors themselves, but this one gives a good summary of what's happening:

TOKYO: About 20,000 people gathered in front of Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda's residence in Tokyo late Friday to protest his decision to restart two nuclear reactors.

"No to the restart!" shouted the protestors, who were led by investigative journalist Satoshi Kamata and Nobel Prize-winning author Kenzaburo Oe, who started an anti-nuclear petition that has so far gathered more than 7.5 million signatures.

Last Saturday, Noda gave the green light to start work to put back online two reactors at the Oi plant in western Japan, despite public distrust in the technology since last year's meltdowns at Fukushima.

Japan had been left without nuclear power since early May when the last of its 50 working reactors was shut down. Authorities took the decision to restart the two reactors as they seek to head off a summer power crunch.

Friday's protest was the latest sign of unease over the decision which was taken in conjunction with local authorities and despite the fact that Noda had previously vowed not to act without public backing.

Protesters said they would hold another demonstration next week.

"The battle has only just begun", insisted renowned composer Ryuichi Sakamoto, another leading figure in the anti-nuclear movement.

Radiation was spread over homes and farmland in a large swathe of northern Japan when a 9.0-magnitude earthquake and ensuing tsunami in March last year crippled the cooling system of the Fukushima Daiichi plant.

No one is officially recorded as having died as a direct result of the meltdowns, but tens of thousands of people were evacuated and many remain so, with warnings some areas will be uninhabitable for decades.


Source: Channel News Asia
Image Source: Daylife
sashwizzled 24th-Jun-2012 10:41 am (UTC)
Yeah, I'm pretty impressed Japanese people are actually showing something besides overwhelming amounts of apathy for anything political, so go them. Even if I don't agree with the cause - unless they've found a way to power a country on kitten farts and Arashi's metrosexuality.
fub 24th-Jun-2012 10:57 am (UTC)
What a bunch of short-sighted people. Let's hear them complain when they can't switch on their airconditioners this summer, or when Japan starts upping their coal-fired generation capacity.
You need something to generate a base load on the electrical network -- and solar and wind aren't it. Nuclear power plants are cheap, efficient and don't spew vast quantities of CO2 and other noxious gasses into the atmosphere.

If it weren't for those damn green hippies, we'd have invested heavily into nuclear fuel and would be making use of safer, upgraded designs. But because no-one wants to invest, we're stuck with older, less safe designs.

(I live near a gas-fired plant. The smoke drifts to a nearby village. There is a statistically significant higher incidence of cancer in the village than elsewhere...)
aquariia 24th-Jun-2012 12:32 pm (UTC)
THIS
awkward_as_heck 24th-Jun-2012 01:04 pm (UTC)
This so much. Safer designs have been developed but as you said, no-one will invest.

I've lived through two Japanese summers, pretty much every shop has the air con cranked up to the max.
haimazn 24th-Jun-2012 02:14 pm (UTC)
Thank you. I hate listening to people complain about this, when in reality they need it. I wish people would stop thinking solar and wind are solutions to all of our electrical needs.
gloris 24th-Jun-2012 02:30 pm (UTC)
This basically. The people in my country are pretty much against nuclear technology but keep on whining incessantly when the power provider raise the tariff due to the increase price of coal.

/sigh
sandpanther 24th-Jun-2012 08:08 pm (UTC)
Let's hear them complain when they can't switch on their airconditioners this summer

Or all the escalators are turned off, or people lose their jobs because the economy slows due to businesses not getting the power they need.

Nuclear power vs. coal power is a lot like airplanes vs. cars. For the former when something goes wrong it goes spectacularly wrong, while the latter quietly goes killing more people each year than the former ever has. It's unfortunate people like the devil they know so much, even though it comes at a higher health cost.
coika 25th-Jun-2012 01:23 am (UTC)
What escalators..? They're not that common outside of big cities, LBR.

A lot of people that have already lost their jobs to companies wanting to employ temp workers over full time employment. These companies now can't get enough people to fill their jobs because people won't bite for the low salary and no benefits. A lot of them are losing profit because the workers they have can't meet the same expectations for a higher staff number and more people quit/mistakes happen/etc. Japan has an unemployment problem, but it's not because people can't find jobs; they're being more choosy about them.

If companies choose to cut back more jobs/benefits/salaries for this reason, in the end it's only hurting those top salary bosses/government officials/whatever in the end. When a revolution comes, those people are always the first to go.
coika 25th-Jun-2012 01:08 am (UTC)
Honestly Japanese people aren't really using their aircons, at least in the countryside where I live, so I dunno first point kind of invalid.

I agree there are safer ways to use nuclear power, but the Japanese government is not even considering them and it's not because of these "hippies". Companies aren't investing because they can't figure out how to make top yen from it and they're all about a profit.

After the issue with Fukushima they discovered other not-up-to-standards reactors elsewhere. The government also hasn't even issued any kind of convincing statement that some of these reactors are now safe to use. It's easy to see where people's fear and apprehension stems from.
iime 24th-Jun-2012 11:00 am (UTC)
Pathetic.

They can't invent or build anything, least niclear reactor, only cry and twit irresponsibly.
angelachibayuy 26th-Jun-2012 10:27 pm (UTC)
Pretty much. If there was an alternative being offered (even one that would take many years) by the protesters I would be totally on their side. But... there is none, so just crying no nukes and blaming Noda (in a quite creepy way) isn't doing anything.
sibylblack 24th-Jun-2012 11:48 am (UTC)
As much as I hate nuclear plants, I can't imagine how Japan would go on without them.
atelierlune 24th-Jun-2012 07:42 pm (UTC)
Maybe this is the beginning. Maybe people will start getting angrier and angrier, and then something will have to give.
coika 25th-Jun-2012 01:33 am (UTC)
I hope this is what happens.

Maybe it won't be in the immediate future, but I think eventually something is going to snap with the people as a whole.

Kind of how when crime happens here, it's usually random and crazy. You get this person who's calmly put up with all this shit for years and years and then suddenly all that pent up rage snaps.
atelierlune 25th-Jun-2012 02:04 am (UTC)
I don't want to believe that the Japanese are to impotent to find a way out of this. I don't know what that way will be, but I think something/someone has to give.
mjspice 25th-Jun-2012 02:05 pm (UTC)
That's so awesome! GO JAPAN!!
angelachibayuy 26th-Jun-2012 10:26 pm (UTC)
Graw, Nukes != nuclear power. I seriously wish people would get this through their head. At least then these protesters might research more about the actual fission process, though part of the problem comes from the word for nuclear power having explosion in it in Japanese x_x.

I am not pro or anti-nuclear, I am just anti-ignorance, and I have yet to see a nuclear protest here that had people who could actually tell you how nuclear energy works.

Tepco messed up bad and unfortunately they ruined a very useful power source for the rest of the world. Yeah, not the best idea in Japan, but it is necessary until alternatives are found. Just means another careful summer of energy consumption, even more than last year.
coika 27th-Jun-2012 03:21 pm (UTC)
I feel the same way...

Personally I think, what with it being earthquake central, Japan should have anticipated what happened last year decades ago and perhaps considered that before making the country reliant on nuclear power.

But what's done is done... And without any companies investing in safe nuclear energy or extensive research for other options (not at the fault of these protesters like other comments are alluding to, but rather because companies can't find any immediate profit from them) Japan is kind of stuck.

I do think that rather than depending on companies to invest, the government should take the initiative instead. Ideally I would hope the protests could possibly push this along, but what with Japanese politicians being so greedy (which is usually a given in any country, but at least I could actually see where some of my tax money was going in the U.S. instead of feeling akin to getting more results from setting my hard earned yen on fire) I doubt it'll happen.

Overall, I'm impressed the Japanese are starting to band together for something, even if the effort is a little misguided. What with how everyone's usually so concerned about how being seen might shame the company they work for/their family/etc. to do anything at all...
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