Resident defiant in Japan's exclusion zone

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Selected by Rael

unread,
Jan 29, 2012, 2:05:38 AM1/29/12
to rael-s...@googlegroups.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Raelian Movement
for those who are not afraid of the future : http://www.rael.org
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

http://edition.cnn.com/2012/01/27/world/asia/japan-zone-resident/index.html?
hpt=hp_c1

Resident defiant in Japan's exclusion zone
By Kyung Lah, CNN
January 27, 2012 -- Updated 0844 GMT (1644 HKT)

Tomioka, Japan (CNN) -- In the shadow of the Fukushima nuclear plant, one
man's quiet defiance echoes through the contaminated, empty streets of
Tomioka, Japan.

Tomioka, 10 miles (16 kilometers) away from the disaster, is inside the 12.4
mile (20-kilometer) radius of the government-mandated evacuation zone. But
that hasn't stopped Naoto Matsumura, 52, a life-long resident and fifth
generation farmer, from refusing to heed the mandatory evacuation since the
nuclear meltdown.

"I'm full of rage," says Matsumura. "That's why I'm still here. I refuse to
leave and let go of this anger and grief. I weep when I see my hometown. The
government and the people in Tokyo don't know what's really happening here."

His defiance began with a simple desire to feed the animals on his farm. The
government evacuated 78,000 residents around the exploding plant without a
plan to rescue pets and valuable livestock.

As Matsumura began to feed his own animals, the neighborhood's desperate
cats and dogs started showing up. He started to feed them too and decided he
couldn't leave them behind to die. When Matsumura ran out of food, he
slipped out of the exclusion zone and bought dog and cat food and then snuck
back into town.

Weeks turned into months and now nearly a year. Conditions are growing worse
by the day, says Matsumura.

Weeks into the evacuation, most of the cows starved to death, tied up in
pens without any food. Maggots and flies covered their bodies, and a putrid
smell came from most of the barns. But one of the worst scenes Matsumura
remembers happened at a neighbor's farm. He found a cow and her calf alive.
The cow was so thin from hunger it was just skin and bones, says Matsumura.
The calf was crying, trying to approach its mother for milk. The mother
kicked the calf, perhaps afraid of death, if it fed the calf, Matsumura
recalled. The calf kept trying to approach for milk, but the mother kept
kicking it away. The calf, dazed and hungry, stumbled away. It crawled into
a corner, crying. The calf was sucking on straw as if it were the mother's
teat, says Matsumura.
Animals left to die in Fukushima zone

He went back the next day and found the cow and her calf dead.
Ghost town: Japan's exclusion zone
I'm full of rage. That's why I'm still here
Naoto Matsumura, Tomioka resident

Repeatedly seeing scenes like this, Matsumura said, made him furious. He
began doing interviews with foreign correspondents, saying the Japanese
press wasn't covering the heartbreak in the exclusion zone.

Read about the exclusion zone-turned ghost town

"The government and Tepco are not doing anything at all," says Matsumura.
"We're the victims. The government and Tepco, they're the perpetrators but
they don't treat us as victims. They pretend they're doing something, but
they don't do anything inside the 20 km zone. I ask the lawmakers to help
but they keep saying that's the 20 km zone. But something needs to be done
now. They are hopeless."

Matsumura wants the cleanup of the contamination to speed up. There are a
few signs that the work has begun in Tomioka, with contaminated soil sitting
under blue tarps in a neighborhood park. But at this pace, Matsumura said,
he'll never live to see Tomioka's people return.

Matsumura hopes as the one year anniversary of this nuclear disaster
approaches, the international community will remember the risks of nuclear
energy.

"You see what can happen. U.S., Russia, Japan -- this is the third nuclear
accident, the third time something we created ended up hurting us. This is
the third time, but we haven't learned our lesson yet."

Matsumura lives without electricity and gets water from a nearby well. He
slips out of the exclusion zone only for food and then returns to feed any
animals he can.

He's been tested for radiation contamination, and results show his body is
"completely contaminated," he says. But he'll stay, he pledges, as the sole
citizen of Tomioka to keep tabs on the government. "We have to decontaminate
this area or else this town will die. I will stay to make sure it's done. I
want to die in my hometown."

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

WARNING FROM RAEL: For those who don't use their intelligence at its
full capacity, the label "selected by RAEL" on some articles does not
mean that I agree with their content or support it. "Selected by RAEL"
means that I believe it is important for the people of this planet to
know about what people think or do, even when what they think or do is
completely stupid and against our philosophy. When I selected articles
in the past about stupid Christian fundamentalists in America praying
for rain, I am sure no Rael-Science reader was stupid enough to
believe that I was supporting praying to change the weather. So, when
I select articles which are in favor of drugs, anti-semitic,
anti-Jewish, racist, revisionist, or inciting hatred against any group
or religion, or any other stupid article, it does not mean that I
support them. It just means that it is important for all human beings
to know about them. Common sense, which is usually very good among our
readers, is good enough to understand that. When, like in the recent
articles on drug decriminalization, it is necessary to make it
clearer, I add a comment, which in this case was very clear: I support
decriminalizing all drugs, as it is stupid to throw depressed and sad
people (as only depressed and sad people use drugs) in prison and ruin
their life with a criminal record. That does not mean that there is
any change to the Message which says clearly that we must not use any
drug except for medical purposes. The same applies to the freedom of
expression which must be absolute. That does not mean again of course
that I agree with anti-Jews, antisemites, racists of any kind or
anti-Raelians. But by knowing your enemies or the enemies of your
values, you are better equipped to fight them. With love and respect
of course, and with the wonderful sentence of the French philosopher
Voltaire in mind: "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to
the death your right to say it".


Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages