"The Fukushima Disaster, The Hidden Side of the Story" is a just-released film documentary, a powerful, moving, information-full film that is superbly made. Directed and edited by Philippe Carillo, it is among the strongest ever made on the deadly dangers of nuclear technology.
It begins with the words in 1961 of U.S. President John F. Kennedy: "Every man, woman and child lives under a nuclear sword of Damocles, hanging by the slenderest of threads, capable of being cut at any moment by an accident, or miscalculation or by madness."
It then goes to the March 2011 disaster at the Fukushima Daichi nuclear power plants in Japan after they were struck by a tsunami. Their back-up diesel generators were kicked in but "did not run for long", notes the documentary. That led to three of the six plants exploding--and there's video of this--releasing an unpreceded amount of nuclear radiation into the air."
"Fukushima is the world's largest-ever industrial catastrophe," says Professor John Keane of the University of Sydney in Australia. He says there was no emergency plan and, as to the owner of Fukushima, Tokyo Electric Power Company, with the accident its CEO "for five nights and days locked himself inside his office".
Meanwhile, from TEPCO, there was "only good news" with two Japanese government agencies also "involved in the cover-up--the Nuclear Industry Safety Agency and Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry.
"Japanese media was ordered to censor information. The Japanese government failed to protect its people," the documentary relates.
Yumi Kikuchi of Fukushima, since a leader of the Fukushima Kids Project, recalls: "On TV, they said that 'it's under control' and they kept saying that for two months. The nuclear power plant had already melted and even exploded but they never admitted the meltdown until May. So, people in Fukushima during that time were severely exposed to radiation."
Arnie Gundersen, a nuclear engineer and now a principal of Fairewinds Energy Education in Burlington, Vermont, speaks of being told by Naoto Kan, the prime minister of Japan at the time of the accident, that "our existence as a sovereign nation was at stake because of the disaster at Fukushima Daichi."
Kan then appears in documentary and speaks of "manmade" links to the disaster.
The documentary tells how Kan, following the accident, became "an advocate against nuclear power, ordered all nuclear power plants in Japan to shut down for safety" and for the nation "to move into renewable energy."
But, subsequently, "a nuclear advocate," Shinzo Abe, became Japan's prime minister.
Yoichi Shimatsu, a former Japan Times journalist, appears in the film and speaks of "the cruelty, the cynicism of this government." He speaks of how in the accident's aftermath, "nearly every member of Parliament and leaders of the major political parties" along with corporate executives, "moved their relatives out of Japan".
He says "Shanghai is the largest Japanese community outside Japan now while these same people" had been "telling the people of Fukushima go home, 10 kilometers from Fukushima, go home it's safe, while their families are overseas in Los Angeles, in Paris, in London and in Shanghai."
"If it's safe, why they left?" asks Kikuchi. "They tell us it's safe to live in Fukushima, and to eat Fukushima food to support Fukushima people. There's a campaign by Japanese government--and people believe it."
Gundersen says: "At Fukushima Daichi, the world is already seeing deaths from cancer related to the disaster--There'll be many more over time." He adds that there's been a "huge increase in thyroid cancer in the surrounding population.
"Unfortunately," he goes on, "the Japanese government is not telling us all the evidence. There's a lot of pressure on the scientists and the medical community to distort the evidence so there's no blowback against nuclear power."
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