Protesters in Japan demand end to nukes

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Hundreds of people rallied in a Tokyo park March 9, demanding an end to atomic power, and vowing never to give up the fight, despite two years of little change after the nuclear disaster in Fukushima, northeastern Japan.

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Protesters in Japan demand end to nukes
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Hundreds of people rallied in a Tokyo park March 9, demanding an end to atomic power, and vowing never to give up the fight, despite two years of little change after the nuclear disaster in Fukushima, northeastern Japan.

Gathering on a weekend ahead of the second anniversary of the March 11 quake and tsunami that sent Fukushima Dai-ichi plant into multiple meltdowns, demonstrators said they would never forget the world's worst nuclear catastrophe, and expressed alarm over the government's eagerness to restart reactors.

“I can't see what lies ahead. It looks hopeless, but if I give up now, it's over,” said Akihiro Nakata, a 47-year-old owner of a construction company, with a drum to beat slung around his shoulder. “I'd rather die moving forward.”

Only two of this nation's 50 working reactors are back online, partly because of continuous protests like March 9's, the first time such demonstrations have popped up in this nation since the 1960s movement against the Vietnam War.

People have thronged Tokyo parks on national holidays, and outside the Parliament building every Friday evening, drawing people previously unseen at political rallies, such as commuter “salarymen” and housewives.

Two years later, 160,000 people have left their homes around the plant, entire sections of nearby communities are still ghost-towns, and fears grow about cancer and other sicknesses the spewing radiation might bring.

But the new prime minister elected late last year, Shinzo Abe, hailing from a conservative party that fostered the pro-nuclear policies of modernizing Japan, wants to restart the reactors, maybe even build new ones.

The protesters said they were shocked by how the government was ignoring them.

“I am going to fight against those who act as though Hiroshima, Nagasaki and Fukushima never happened,” Nobel Prize-winning writer Kenzaburo Oe told the crowd, referring to the atomic bombings preceding the end of World War II. “I am going to fight to prevent any more reactors from being restarted.”

The demonstrators applauded, waving signs and lanterns that said, “Let's save the children,” and “No nukes.” Some were handing out leaflets, pleading to save animals abandoned in the no-go zone.

Kazuko Nihei, 36, selling trinkets and soap that mothers, like her, who had fled Fukushima, had made, hoping to raise funds for children's health checkups and their new lives in Tokyo.

“When the government talks about recovery, they are talking about infrastructure. When we talk about recovery, we are talking about the future of our children,” she said.

A concert March 9 evening features Oscar and Grammy-winning musician Ryuichi Sakamoto, one of the most vocal opponents of nuclear power. Commemorative services are held throughout the nation March 11. The quake and tsunami killed nearly 19,000 people.

Less under the spotlight March 11 will be a class-action lawsuit being filed against the government and Tokyo Electric Power Co., the utility that operates Fukushima Dai-ichi, demanding all land, the natural environment and homes be restored to their state before March 11, 2011.

The lawsuit in Fukushima District Court is unusual in drawing people from all walks of life, including farmers, fishermen and housewives, because of the wording of the damage demand.

It has drawn 800 plaintiffs so far, a remarkable number in a conformist culture that frowns upon any challenge to the status quo, especially lawsuits. That number may grow as people join the lawsuit in coming months. A verdict is not expected for more than a year.

“We can't believe the government is thinking about restarting the reactors after the horrendous damage and human pain the accident has caused,” Izutaro Managi, one of the lawyers, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview. “It is tantamount to victimizing the victims one more time.”

Kazuko Ishige, a 66-year-old apartment manager, who was at the rally with a friend from Fukushima, said she was sick of the government's lies about the safety of nuclear plants.

“I am really angry,” she said. “I am going to have to keep at it until I die.”

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