NYTimes | Every month, Hiroko Watabe, 74, returns for a
few hours to her abandoned house near the damaged Fukushima nuclear
plant to engage in her own small act of defiance against fate. She dons a
surgical mask, hangs two radiation-measuring devices around her neck
and crouches down to pull weeds.
She is desperate to keep her small yard clean to prove she has not given
up on her home, which she and her family evacuated two years ago after a
9.0 earthquake and a tsunami devastated the plant five miles away. Not
all her neighbors are willing to take the risk; chest-high weeds now
block the doorways of their once-tidy homes.
“In my heart, I know we can never live here again,” said Ms. Watabe, who
drove here with her husband from Koriyama, the city an hour away where
they have lived since the disaster. “But doing this gives us a purpose.
We are saying that this is still our home.”
While the continuing environmental disaster at the Fukushima Daiichi
plant has grabbed world headlines — with hundreds of tons of
contaminated water flowing into the Pacific Ocean daily — a human crisis
has been quietly unfolding. Two and a half years after the plant
belched plumes of radioactive materials over northeast Japan, the almost
83,000 nuclear refugees evacuated from the worst-hit areas are still
unable to go home. Some have moved on, reluctantly, but tens of
thousands remain in a legal and emotional limbo while the government
holds out hope that they can one day return.
As they wait, many are growing bitter. Most have supported the official
goal of decontaminating the towns so that people can return to homes
that some families inhabited for generations. Now they suspect the
government knows that the unprecedented cleanup will take years, if not
decades longer than promised, as a growing chorus of independent experts
have warned, but will not admit it for fear of dooming plans to restart
Japan’s other nuclear plants.
That has left the people of Namie and many of the 10 other evacuated
towns with few good choices. They can continue to live in cramped
temporary housing and collect relatively meager monthly compensation
from the government. Or they can try to build a new life elsewhere, a
near impossibility for many unless the government admits defeat and
fully compensates them for their lost homes and livelihoods.
“The national government orders us to go back, but then orders us to
just wait and wait,” said Tamotsu Baba, the mayor of this town of 20,000
people that was hastily evacuated when explosions began to rock the
plant. “The bureaucrats want to avoid taking responsibility for
everything that has happened, and we commoners pay the price.”
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