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Japan to lift evacuation order in town hosting Fukushima plant by Staff Writers Tokyo (AFP) March 26, 2019 Japan will for the first time next month lift an evacuation order in one of two towns where the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant is located, officials said Tuesday. The government plans to lift the order for part of Okuma town on April 10, cabinet office official Yohei Ogino told AFP. It will be the first time the government has lifted an evacuation order in the towns -- Okuma and Futaba -- that host the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. Okuma mayor Toshitsuna Watanabe described the decision as a "very welcome move", a town official said. "We will be able to take the first step forward (towards reconstruction) eight years later," the official quoted Watanabe as saying. In March 2011, a massive tsunami caused by an earthquake slammed into Japan, killing more than 18,000 and setting off the worst nuclear accident in a generation. Japan's government has lifted evacuation orders across much of the region affected by the meltdown -- allowing residents to return -- as Tokyo has pressed an aggressive decontamination programme involving removing radioactive topsoil and cleaning affected areas. But not everyone has been convinced, with a poll conducted in February by the Asahi Shimbun daily and Fukushima local broadcaster KFB finding that 60 percent of Fukushima region residents still felt anxious about radiation. No-one is officially recorded as having died as a result of radiation from the accident, but last year the government for the first time acknowledged the death from cancer of a man involved in the cleanup. More than 3,700 people -- most of them from Fukushima -- have died from illness or suicide linked to the aftermath of the tragedy, according to government data. As of the end of February, around 52,000 people remain displaced because of evacuation orders or because they are unwilling to return, according to Japan's Reconstruction Agency.
Fukushima: current state of the clean-up Tokyo (AFP) March 8, 2019 Eight years have passed since a tsunami smashed into the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in Japan, sparking a meltdown and the worst atomic crisis since Chernobyl. Eight years on, the disaster zone remains a huge building site with the immediate danger cleared but an immensely difficult clean-up job still looming. - What is the state of the clean-up? - The clean-up operation is progressing at a painstakingly slow pace. Robotic arms have recently been employed to successfully pick up pebb ... read more
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