<阿武隈川物語>(28)人権とは 福島で問う via 河北新報

◎第6部 近現代(1)自由民権運動

明治維新で日本は上からの近代化を推し進めた。個人の人権より、天皇を中心とする国家体制が優先された。富国強兵の国策は戦争につながり、悲劇を招いた。近代のひずみを最も大きく受けた東北。東京電力福島第1原発事故はその延長線上にあり象徴的だ。阿武隈川流域で、敗戦までの近現代史を考える。(角田支局・会田正宣)

<重謙屋敷で演劇>
阿武隈山地の福島県石川町中心部に立派な屋敷がある。自由民権運動に熱心だった元庄屋、鈴木重謙(じゅうけん)の屋敷だ。ここで2018年11月、劇の上演があった。
須賀川市のNPO法人「はっぴーあいらんど☆ネットワーク」の演劇「天福ノ島」。民権運動に対する弾圧と、原発事故を巡る福島の苦悩を交差させ、自由や人権の意味を問い掛けた。
同町は知る人ぞ知る「民権運動発祥の地」だ。西の板垣退助と並び称された東の河野広中は、石川区長に赴任して民権運動を始めた。重謙屋敷は河野が執務した区会所で、民権運動家の立会演説会場にもなった。

<有志会議を開設>
同町の民権運動結社「石陽社」の前身である有志会議は1875年に開設された。土佐(高知県)の立志社設立の1年後で、東日本で最も早かった。
石陽社員の中心は農民や神官で、士族中心の土佐と異なる。同町の郷土史研究団体「石陽史学会」前会長の小豆畑(あずはた)毅さん(77)は「封建時代の身分制度に苦しんだ階層が民権思想を受け入れた。上からの啓蒙(けいもう)ではなかった」と説明する。

(略)

民権運動研究の第一人者である安在邦夫早大名誉教授(二本松市出身)はじめ、全国の研究者が参加する福島自由民権大学が1991年から活動する。
町在住の代表運営委員鈴木吉重さん(66)は原発事故当時、浪江高(浪江町)の校長だった。二本松、いわき両市にサテライト校を置いた同高だが、避難のため新入生は定員の半数だった。

(略)

原発事故に翻弄された一人でもある鈴木さんは強調する。「日本の歴史上、人権への目覚めに結びついたのが民権運動だ。災害を通じて人権の大切さを痛感した福島で、民権運動を再考する意義は大きい」

[自由民権運動]1874年の民選議院設立の建白書の提出を機に、国会開設や憲法制定などを求めた政治運動。各地の民権運動家らが民主的な憲法草案を作ったが、天皇を元首とする大日本帝国憲法が89年に発布された。福島県令の三島通庸は82年の福島事件で民権運動家らを弾圧した。

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民間に限界、万策尽きる 消えた原発輸出(ルポ迫真) via 日本経済新聞

[…]

「もう限界だ」。会長の中西宏明(72)が昨年12月の段階で吐露した苦渋が行き着いた結論だった。日本が国策に掲げる原発輸出の案件が事実上ゼロになった瞬間だ。

2018年11月19日。中西は東京・霞が関の経済産業省を訪れ、経産相の世耕弘成(56)に切り出した。「このままでは事業を続けられません」。世耕は「もう少しがんばってください」と応じたと関係者は明かす。

[…]

世耕の言葉に中西は複雑な思いを抱いたはずだ。日立と日英政府が結んだ覚書には「日本企業の出資者は日本政府が責任を持って集める」とある。経産省が役割を果たせていないことこそが、中西の悩みの種だった。

出資者の筆頭候補とされたのが東京電力ホールディングスだ。政府が筆頭株主で、事実上の国有状態にある。打診を受けた他社は「東電が出すなら」(国際協力銀行)と口をそろえた。

しかも東電会長は日立出身の川村隆(79)だ。日立が英原発事業に乗り出した12年当時は同社の会長だった。「沈む巨艦」と呼ばれた日立を立て直すのを、中西は副社長、社長として支えた。

だが東電は動かなかった。社長の小早川智明(55)らは「人は出せても金は出せない」と繰り返した。福島第1原発事故の賠償や廃炉作業に直面するなか、海外原発に資金を投じるのは理解が得られないとの判断だ。

川村も「社内の会議では一切発言しなかった」(東電幹部)。元日立首脳は「川村さんは当初から英事業に懸念を持っていた」と説明する。英政府からの打診を持ち込んだのは、元駐日英大使で中西がスカウトしたスティーブン・ゴマソール(71)だ。中西は受諾を即決したが川村は「議論を尽くしたのか」と苦言を呈したという。

東京大学で原子力を学んだ川村は福島第1原発事故後も「原発は必要だ」との立場を変えていない。ただ、原発全体の建設や運営にも関わる英事業は原子炉メーカーの日立にはリスクが大きいと心配していたという。

[…]

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原発の火災報告、東電放置「期限が明文化されていない」 via 朝日新聞

東京電力の柏崎刈羽(新潟県)、福島第一、福島第二(いずれも福島県)の3原発で起きた火災などのトラブルについて、東電本社が原発側からの報告を放置し、予防策を検討していなかったことが原子力規制委員会の検査でわかった。規制委は13日、保安規定違反があったとして、詳しく調べる方針を決めた。

[…]

規制委によると、昨年11~12月に実施した福島第二の保安検査で、1、2号機の廃棄物処理建屋であった火災や2号機の空調故障など4件について、報告を受けた本社の担当部署がシステムに登録せず、放置していたことが判明。同じような登録漏れは、過去3年間に柏崎刈羽で17件、福島第一で5件、本社内のトラブル報告でも7件あった。来月の検査で放置した詳しい原因を調べ、保安規定違反の重さを判断するという。

東電は「処理する期限が明文化されておらず、先延ばしにした」と説明している。(小川裕介)

 

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Green New Deal & Climate Change: NUKES ARE NOT THE ANSWER! Fairewinds’ Gundersen w/the Science, NEIS’s Snyder w/the Languaging Tricks NH #399 via Nuclear Hotseat

 
This Week’s Featured Interviews: 
  • Are nukes “carbon-free” and can they actually help turn around global warming?  Arnie Gundersen — Chief Engineer at Fairewinds Energy Education, as well as a former licensed nuclear reactor operator and whistleblower — rips that nuclear industry propaganda campaign to shreds. 
  • Green New Deal languaging analyzed for hidden pro-nuclear landmines by Gail Snyder, Board Chair of Chicago-based Nuclear Energy Information Service (NEIS).

A reminder that I’m requesting support to help me attend the TMI/40 events at the end of March for the 40th anniversary commemoration.  Please, to donate what you can – CLICK HERE.  And thank you! – Libbe.

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Kyushu Electric to scrap No. 2 reactor at Genkai nuclear plant due to cost of safety upgrades at aging site via The Japan Times

[…]

The utility abandoned a plan to restart the unit, which has an output of 559 megawatts, in the face of the huge costs involved in enhancing the safety of the reactor that is already near the end of its 40-year operating life.

The firm also took into account that it is unable to secure land to build a counterterrorism facility, which is required under Japan’s new nuclear safety rules.

Kyushu Electric President Kazuhiro Ikebe met Saga Gov. Yoshinori Yamaguchi Wednesday to notify him of the decision.

“Even if the plant is decommissioned, it doesn’t mean the nuclear fuel or radioactive materials will disappear immediately,” Yamaguchi said. “We hope you will be absolutely sure about securing safety.”

The move had been a focus of attention as the firm needed to apply to extend the unit’s operations by March 2020, a year before it would reach its operating limit.

The reactor, which started operating in March 1981, has been idled since a routine checkup shortly before the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami disaster that triggered the Fukushima nuclear crisis.

[…]

Kyushu Electric restarted the newer Nos. 3 and 4 reactors, which each have an output of 1,180 megawatts, in 2018, after securing approval under the stricter safety rules introduced in the wake of the core meltdowns at the Fukushima No. 1 power plant.

Aside from the reactors at the Fukushima plant, decommissioning of 10 reactors at seven plants in Japan has already been decided since the Nuclear Regulation Authority introduced the new rules. Genkai’s No. 2 unit will be the 11th such reactor.

There have been a number of operational problems at the Genkai power plant. In May last year, pumps installed to control the circulation of cooling water at the No. 4 unit suffered malfunctions, following a steam leak from a pipe at the No. 3 reactor just a week after it was reactivated in March.

Some local residents have sought to stop operation of the Nos. 3 and 4 units with a temporary injunction, with doubts about the safety measures taken and citing the risk of volcanic eruptions in the region. Their case is pending at the Fukuoka High Court.

[…]

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The Atomic Soldiers via The New York Times

By Morgan Knibbe

Feb. 12, 2019

I’ve always been fascinated by nuclear weapons and the self-destructive tendencies of mankind. So when I found declassified United States Civil Defense footage of soldiers maneuvering in the glare of a mushroom cloud, I wanted to learn more about their stories.

I discovered that as many as 400,000 American soldiers and sailors observed nuclear explosions just a few miles from ground zero in more than 200 atmospheric tests conducted between 1946 and 1962. […]I was baffled by the lack of recorded testimonies available, but I found a few firsthand accounts of the soldiers’ experiences. Many of them said they’d been positioned much closer to the point of detonation than in the footage I’d seen.

With so little information available and the number of remaining veterans dwindling rapidly, I wanted to prevent these stories from disappearing. I decided to interview some of them as research for a fiction film on the topic and wound up making this documentary in the process. I traveled across the United States to record the veterans’ accounts on camera.

Connecting with them wasn’t easy. Most of the veterans had either passed away or didn’t use email or mobile phones. Because of secrecy agreements they had signed, some of them were hesitant to talk about their experiences. My nationality also raised suspicion: Why was a 25-year-old Dutchman prying into their nation’s secret military past? After the soldiers realized my intention was to give them a voice, they finally opened up to me.

Getting to know these men was an experience I will never forget. I realized that my own generation seems to have become numb to what nuclear war could do to humanity. The accounts of the atomic soldiers can help us understand that horror.

 

Read more and watch video.

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Study: No leaking radiation from Alaska island nuclear site via WJLA

The latest round of testing on Alaska’s remote Amchitka Island found no radioactive material has leaked from locations where the federal government conducted underground nuclear tests there decades ago, a federal official said Tuesday.

Environmental samples tested in 2016 show no subsurface migration of radioactive material, said Jason Nguyen with the U.S. Department of Energy. Samples tested in 2011 also showed no “excessive risk” was found, he said. The department funds sample testing conducted on the island every five years.

[…]

Nguyen, the department’s site manager for Amchitka work, also said a 2014 earthquake with a magnitude 7.9 damaged the caps of three drilling mud pits on the now-uninhabited island. But he said none of the diesel-fuel filled mud was exposed. The damage has not yet been repaired.

Three nuclear tests were conducted between 1965 and 1971 on Amchitka, located in the Aleutian Islands chain 1,340 miles southwest of Anchorage. The island was occupied by Aleuts for thousands of years. But they were long gone by the time the U.S. military built a base there during World War II as a strategic defense post, said Bruce Wright, the science adviser for the Aleutian Pribilof Islands Association, a tribal organization for Alaska’s Aleuts including those on the closest occupied location, Adak Island, 200 miles east of Amchitka. Wright was among the speakers at Tuesday’s gathering.

[…]

The 2011 sampling report said tests indicated that seafood harvested near the now-unoccupied island is safe to eat. The report also said radioactive material from the nuclear tests has remained in the subsurface of each blast location, with the exception of small concentrations of radioactive material detected in several places in subsurface water after the first nuclear test.

The first of the nuclear blasts, dubbed Long Shot, was launched in 1965 with a goal of improving detections of underground nuclear explosions. The second test, called Milrow, was conducted in 1969 to assess detonations of much larger bombs.

The final blast, called Cannikin, the largest underground nuclear test in U.S. history, was launched in 1971 as a weapons-related test. That detonation lifted the ground 20 feet and was equal to the 400 times the power of the bomb dropped on Hiroshima, according to information on the National Park Service website. Between 700 and 2,000 sea otters were killed by pressure changes caused by the explosion.

[…]

Radiation-related cancers were far more common among scores of people who worked on Amchitka than among the general population, according to health screenings done through a federal government program. The program compensated hundreds of workers for medical costs.

Others, like Hayden McClure of Palmer, Alaska, received no compensation because he worked there many years after the nuclear blasts. The 71-year-old retired heavy equipment operator is convinced his blood cancer, lymph disease, bone lesions and other health problems stemmed from the 75 days he spend digging trenches on the island in 1988. A fellow worker developed leukemia and died the following year, he said.

“I didn’t have any medical problems until I went there,” he said of his time on Amchitka.

Read more at Study: No leaking radiation from Alaska island nuclear site

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Spain plans to close all nuclear plants by 2035 via Channel News Asia

MADRID: Spain aims to close all seven of its nuclear plants between 2025 and 2035 as part of plans to generate all the country’s electricity from renewable sources by 2050.

Energy Minister Teresa Ribera announced the move on Tuesday (Feb 12), just as the Socialist government gears up to call an early national election in anticipation of losing a budget vote.

Overhauling Spain’s energy system, which generated 40 per cent of its mainland electricity from renewable sources in 2018, will require investment of 235 billion euros (US$266 billion) between 2021 and 2030, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said last month.

[…]

Phasing out nuclear power, which accounts for a little over 20 per cent of mainland Spain’s electricity, was a campaign pledge for the governing Socialists, who took office last summer after toppling their conservative predecessors in a confidence vote.

Spain’s nuclear plants, which started operating between 1983 and 1988, are owned by Iberdrola, Italian-owned Endesa, Naturgy and Portugal’s EDP.

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福島第1原発ルポ 廃炉へ「まだスタート地点」via 神戸新聞

東日本大震災から8年を前に、日本記者クラブ取材団の一員として東京電力福島第1原発などを訪れた。史上最悪レベルの原子力事故を起こした現場は除染作業が進み、敷地内の96%が一般作業服で活動できるようになっていた。一方で、汚染水や廃棄物は増え続け、原子炉格納容器内に溶け落ちた核燃料(デブリ)は残ったまま。廃炉作業の先行きはまだ見通せていない。(今福寛子)

(略)

■次々鳴る線量計

視察のコースでもある高台は、除染の成果で昨年11月からマスクなしで見学できるようになった。そもそもこの日の装備は軽装で、ヘルメットに簡易なベスト、長靴、マスクと手袋、眼鏡だけ。すれ違う作業員も全面マスク、防護服姿の人は見当たらなかった。

「ピッ」「ピッ」。取材を始め5分ほどで、周囲の線量計が次々に鳴り始めた。20マイクロシーベルトに上がると、音が出る。歯のエックス線撮影1回で10マイクロシーベルト程度といい、頭では心配ないと理解しているが、思わず体がこわばった。

今回見学した中で最も放射線量が高かったのは、2号機と3号機の間の通路。3号機の上部はがれきが撤去されたが、横から見上げると水素爆発で破壊された当時のまま。コンクリートはボロボロに崩れ鉄筋がむき出しに。建屋の壁は放射性物質の飛散防止剤がまかれ、緑色に染まっていた。

使用済み核燃料プールから放射線が漏れている影響で、3号機に近づくと線量計の数字が一気に上がり毎時約350マイクロシーベルトを計測。5分ほどで慌ただしくバスに戻った。

■立ち並ぶタンク

もともと緑豊かだった敷地内は放射性物質が舞い散らないよう木を伐採して舗装し、至る所に汚染水の巨大タンクが立ち並ぶ。高さ約10メートル、約1200トンを貯蔵できるタンクは1週間から10日で満杯になる。東電の計画では2020年末までに137万トン分を製作する予定。限られた敷地の中でこれからも増え続ける。

軽装備で作業できるエリアが広がり、食堂やコンビニが入る大型休憩所の整備など作業員の労働環境は格段に改善されたという。ただ、1~3号機内の放射線量はいまだ高く、デブリ取り出しの方法は模索中。廃炉の目標は2040~50年としているが、東電の担当者は「まだスタート地点に立ったところ」と説明。道のりの困難さをうかがわせた。

全文は福島第1原発ルポ 廃炉へ「まだスタート地点」

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TEPCO begins probe to make 1st contact with nuke debris at Fukushima plant via The Mainichi

TOKYO — A probe to make the first contact with nuclear fuel debris inside the No. 2 reactor at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station in the northeastern prefecture of Fukushima started on Feb. 13, the plant’s operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) said.

The examination using a remotely operated device, which began shortly after 7 a.m., will try to hold and lift the debris and check its status on the floor of the reactor’s containment vessel. The device has two roughly 3-centimeter-long “fingers” — capable of holding an object up to 2 kilograms in weight — attached to its 30-centimeter-long, camera-mounted tip. The equipment was placed inside the vessel via a pipe that can be expanded from 11 meters to 15 meters in length. The debris will remain inside the reactor throughout the test.

[…]

The damaged reactors released a massive amount of radioactive materials into the air, forcing hundreds of thousands of nearby residents to flee their homes.

(Japanese original by Toshiyuki Suzuki, Science & Environment News Department)

Read more at TEPCO begins probe to make 1st contact with nuke debris at Fukushima plant

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