TOKYO, Aug. 27 (Xinhua) — Haruo Ono, a fisherman within the city of Shinchi in Japan’s Fukushima Prefecture, has been fishing within the sea for 56 years since he was 15 years outdated.
Shinchi is positioned within the japanese a part of Fukushima Prefecture, dealing with the Pacific Ocean. The waters listed below are the place the nice and cozy Kuroshio Current meets the chilly Oyashio Current, thus a pure high-quality fishing floor. Its seafood was as soon as the “darling” of fish wholesale markets in massive cities resembling Tokyo.
But after a 9.0-magnitude earthquake hit northeast Japan on March 11, 2011, which can be identified within the nation because the Great East Japan Earthquake, wholesalers at Tokyo’s well-known Tsukiji fish market had been reluctant to buy fish merchandise from Fukushima. It was not till the previous few years that the costs of Fukushima seafood returned to pre-earthquake ranges.
Despite the raging opposition of the worldwide group, Japan began releasing nuclear-contaminated wastewater from the crippled Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant into the Pacific Ocean on Thursday, sparking issues amongst many fishermen about their livelihoods.
The 71-year-old fisherman instructed Xinhua in a latest interview that “for us, the ocean discharge is a matter of survival.”
The Japanese prime minister and the minister of financial system, commerce and business have visited Fukushima many occasions, however they haven’t met straight with the fishermen, nor have they requested for his or her opinions, Ono stated.
Even extra unacceptable to fishermen is the federal government’s failure to maintain its phrase. Ono stated that fishermen have been voicing opposition, however the authorities nonetheless made a hasty determination, which was unacceptable.
In 2015, the Japanese authorities and the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO), the operator of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, promised native fishermen that they might not launch the radioactive wastewater into the ocean “without the understanding of relevant parties.”
Yoshio Satomi, who lives in Fukushima’s Iwaki City, additionally stated it was unacceptable.
Iwaki City is over 50 kilometers away from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant. Satomi, who runs a sizzling spring lodge with a historical past of greater than 300 years within the metropolis, instructed Xinhua that after the nuclear catastrophe in 2011, there have been fewer guests from outdoors Fukushima and nearly none from overseas.
In latest years, the variety of vacationers has lastly began to choose up, however now news of the nuclear-contaminated water discharge has unfold everywhere in the world, and Fukushima has been implicated once more, Satomi stated.
Satomi stated, “The government promised the fishermen in Fukushima Prefecture not to discharge nuclear-contaminated water arbitrarily, and now it has decided to discharge it, so the government lied.”
The Japanese authorities claimed that with out emptying and eradicating the tanks storing radioactive wastewater within the nuclear energy plant, there won’t be sufficient area for the decommissioning of the reactor and Fukushima will be unable to be revitalized. From Satomi’s viewpoint, that is merely a lie.
In Futaba Town and Okuma Town, the place the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant is positioned, the federal government has poured cash into constructing many lovely homes, however solely 10 p.c at the moment are occupied, and most of those that left Fukushima 12 years in the past have lengthy since settled someplace else.
Satomi stated, “So no matter how much money is spent or how the government talks about revitalization, the reality is that people don’t come back.”
Pediatrician Yoichi Yatsuda is among the residents who’ve returned to Futaba because the evacuation order was lifted in August final 12 months. Futaba had a inhabitants of greater than 7,000 earlier than the accident, however to this point solely about 80 have returned, Yatsuda stated.
Yatsuda and his spouse discovered it onerous to depart their hometown behind, so that they returned shortly after the evacuation order was lifted, though their kids selected to remain in Sendai, a metropolis in Miyagi prefecture.
Ono, a lifelong fisherman, stated he has no different profession selection and can proceed to be a fisherman even when the worth of fish is low. “This is both a fisherman’s pride and a wish for consumers to taste delicious sea fish… Do politicians understand this? The sea is not a dustbin.”
Ono stated that he has joined the plaintiffs to take the Japanese authorities and TEPCO to court docket to cease the discharge plan and can file the lawsuit within the Fukushima District Court in early September.
Ono’s three sons are all fishermen. “I stand against it now so that my sons will not be forced to struggle to live in the future.”