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Remembering Satomi
in Post-Fukushima India By J. Sri Raman, Truthout March 31 2011 |
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I met Satomi first in 2001 in Hiroshima. That city, along with Nagasaki, was
then the only Japanese reminder of the horrors atomic adventurers could unleash.
A decade before Fukushima, she told other participants in a world conference on
nuclear weapons about the perils the nuclear reactors
in her country posed. (Her views, in detail:
http://www.greens.org/s-r/11/11-02.html). It was not long before she
confronted the same issue as the quake-prone land faces currently, in a more
inescapable form.
On October 27, 2004, Sally Light, a close friend and a
courageous US peace campaigner, forwarded to me and others a message from Satomi
about the grave risk of nuclear devastation in the region of Niigata, which was
reeling from an earthquake and aftershocks. The region, on the coast of the Sea
of Japan, housed the large Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear power plant and its seven
reactors. As the executive director of Plutonium Action Hiroshima, Satomi
demanded the plant's immediate shutdown.
The powers that be ignored her, predictably. Tremors hit the same terrain in
July 2007. The whole plant was shut down for 21 months. On May 9, 2009, however,
one unit was restarted, followed by three others later.
Satomi, also an active member of Abolition 2000 and the Global Network Against
Nuclear Power and Weapons in Space, fought for the people's freedom from nuclear
threats everywhere on earth. She hastened to extend her solidarity to us in
far-off India, when a natural calamity raised the specter of a nuclear disaster
here, as well.
On December 26, 2004, a tsunami (of a smaller scale than the one that awaited
Japan, but savage enough all the same) struck India's southern shores. Chennai,
the coastal city where I live, and the surrounding region were victims of the
calamity. A nuclear nightmare seemed a possibility when the giant waves lashed
at an atomic plant in Kalpakkam, on the city's outskirts. Satomi read about it
all and reacted with genuine concern.
On December 31, she wrote to me: "What a horrifying story it is. And we also
have 52 nuclear reactors in operation along the coastline of the Japan Islands.
I fear a lot about possible huge earthquakes directly hitting nuclear
facilities."
I reported on it all in
http://www.truth-out.org/article/tsunamis-and-a-nuclear-threat . Satomi
responded again, linking the subject to Japan's unlearned lesson: "I will
circulate this article all around. In Niigata, there was the same problem.
Though the epicenter was close to the ... reactors in Kashiwazaki-Kariwa, there
was no news about the implication of earthquakes.... "
The article recalled the objections raised by activists to the construction of
reactors in Kalpakkam, especially on the grounds of its location. The opponents
of the plan argued that it violated a law against such environmentally
unfriendly constructions in the terrain defined as the Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ).
"The official reaction was an outrage. It consisted in amending the law to
exempt nuclear plants from its purview."
It was also pointed out that Kalpakkam was only one of the many nuclear
installations to endanger India’s coastal environment. Besides it, five more
places on the country's long coastline harbor nuclear installations -
Koodankulam (located, like Kalpakkam, in the state of Tamilnadu) Kaiga (in
Karnataka), Mumbai, Tarapur and Jaitapur (in Maharashtra), and Kakrapar (in
Gujarat).
In a statement on January 10, 2005, the Chennai-based Movement Against Nuclear
Weapons (MANW) said, "Terse official reassurances cannot take the place of a
transparent and credible investigation of the consequences of the tsunami
disaster in Kalpakkam." It added: "The tsunami disaster also brings into sharper
focus the more basic question: Is it not time for rethinking on the location of
India's nuclear plants on an entirely unprotected coastline?"
Like Satomi in Japan, we were largely ignored then. What about now?
India's nuclear establishment cannot feign supreme indifference to the gigantic
tragedy in Japan. It feels constrained to promise a closer look at the safety of
its nuclear units, particularly the coastal ones. What it has to say about the
devastation at Fukushima, however, does not inspire much hope.
On March 14, Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited (NPCIL) chairman S. K.
Jain said: "There is no nuclear accident or incident in the Japan's Fukushima
plants. It is a well-planned emergency preparedness program which the nuclear
operators of the Tokyo Electric Power company are carrying out to contain the
residual heat after the plants had an automatic shutdown following a major
earthquake."
India's Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) chairman
Srikumar Banerjee added, "It was purely a chemical reaction and not a nuclear
emergency (http://www.dailypioneer.com/324441/No-nuclear-accident-in-Fukushima-Indian-N-experts.html) by some section of media."
Nonofficial experts and nuclear observers do not exude optimism about the
promised review and remedial action. As one of them, S. G. Vombatkere, points
out, under India's present nuclear dispensation, no independent and transparent
review is really possible. Under India's Atomic Energy Act, no one is permitted
to raise questions about the nuclear installations and expect a genuine
response. The nuclear industry alone is allowed to conduct radioactivity tests,
even outside the perimeter of a plant. The country's Environment Protection Act
(http://www.dailypioneer.com/324441/No-nuclear-accident-in-Fukushima-Indian-N-experts.html).
The officially unstated explanation is: a review by outsiders cannot be
contemplated, since every nuclear unit is part of India's security
establishment. This strange idea of "security" does not spell nuclear safety for
the inhabitants of India, especially those residing in its coastal areas.
Others will undoubtedly continue Satomi's struggle in post-Fukushima Japan. It
needs to be carried forward in India as well - and elsewhere in the world. |
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