Fukushima residents angered as court rules government is not liable for damages in nuclear crisis - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 09:41 PM | Calgary | -11.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
World

Fukushima residents angered as court rules government is not liable for damages in nuclear crisis

Japanese plaintiffs in four lawsuits, many still displaced in and outside of Fukushima since a 2011 nuclear crisis, had their bid to sue the government denied on Friday in a highly anticipated ruling.

So far, only Japan's electric utility has been held liable to cover damages

Plaintiffs and their supporters gathered in front of the Tokyo Supreme Court on Friday in anticipation of the decision. (Eugene Hoshiko/The Associated Presss)

Japanese plaintiffs in four lawsuits, many still displaced in and outside of Fukushima since a 2011 nuclear crisis, had their bid to sue the government denied on Friday in a highly anticipated ruling.

The ruling Friday which applied to some 3,700 Fukushima residents was the first word from the top court for evacuees who demanded that the state, not just the utility, pay compensation for the damages inflicted to their lives.

The four-judge bench headed by Hiroyuki Kanno said that the government could not be held liable for the disaster because damage from the tsunami of that magnitude could not have been prevented even if the industry minister had used his regulatory authority and ordered the utility to enhance a seawall based on a tsunami estimate at that time.

Seiju Nanbara, who joined the lawsuit two years after he evacuated from his home in Minamisoma, just north of the wrecked plant, to Chiba, said he and other plaintiffs who heard the ruling in the courtroom were speechless because they were so disappointed.

"The ruling only looked at the government, not us," the 62-year-old said. "I don't think the judges understood, or even tried to understand our pain."

Chief lawyerIzutaro Managisaid,"The ruling is absolutely unacceptable,"as he rushed out from the courtroom to share the decision with the plaintiffs and their supporters who waited outside.

"The court did not squarely faceor respondto the questions we raised."

Lawyer Izutaro Managi speaks to plaintiffs and their supporters after hearing the decision of the Tokyo Supreme Court on Friday. (Eugene Hoshiko/The Associated Press)

He criticized the ruling for failing to address the question over whether the disaster was foreseeable, or if it could have been avoided had the government taken appropriate steps.

Hundreds of plaintiffs and their supporters outside the court showed anger, disappointment and disbelief, but many said they will continue their fight for a better decision in the pending cases.

"We must not let this ruing affect the pending lawsuits," Managi said.

Ruling could set precedent for other suits

The ruling, which reversed three of the four high-court decisions that acknowledged the government's responsibility, could affect about 30 other similar lawsuits pending across the country.

The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant suffered triple meltdowns following the magnitude-9.0 quake and tsunami on March 11, 2011, spreading massive radiation in the area and displacing more than 160,000 people at one point.

WATCH |From 2021: Incentives offered to return to Fukushima, but not all are takers:

Inside Fukushima a decade after tsunami, nuclear disaster

3 years ago
Duration 8:26
Adrienne Arsenault visits Fukushima, Japan to see what life is like 10 years after the region was struck by an earthquake that set off a tsunami and nuclear disaster killing more than 18,000 people and displacing nearly half a million others.

The cases against the government and the plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings (TEPCO) were originally filed separately in Fukushima and three other prefectures Gunma, Chiba and Ehime where the plaintiffs evacuated.

Currently, only TEPCO is obliged to cover damages worth over 1.4 billion yen ($13.75 million Cdn).

The dispute centred on whether the government could have foreseen the risk of a massive tsunami based on a tsunami prediction report, and whether the accident could have been averted if the government had ordered TEPCO to take precautions.

The attention also focused on the reliability of a long-term assessment of seismic activities released by a government expert panel in 2002, nine years before the accident.

Criminal case involving officials ongoing

The government argued that the report was not reliable and the accident was unavoidable.

The plaintiffs said the tsunami assessment was credible and the government should have used it as a basis to order the utility to take tsunami prevention measures. They said the disaster could have been avoided if the government had instructed TEPCO properly.

Survey of Fukushimas animals shows no damage from radiation

A Tokyo District Court ruling in 2019 found three former TEPCO executives not guilty in a criminal case, saying they could not have foreseen the massive tsunami.