Nuclear Fuel Cycle (Public Domain)
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Author Tungsten.
.....Two Former Japanese Prime Ministers Try to Shake Up Japanese Politics to Kill Nuclear Energy
Japan may have enacted a fascist state secrecy law which outlaws independent reporting on Fukushima … but there might be some hope yet.
Specifically, two former Prime Ministers are speaking out on Fukushima and Japan’s energy future.
EneNews gave an excellent roundup last week:
Kyodo, Jan. 14, 2014: Former Prime Minister Morihiro Hosokawa said Tuesday he will run in the upcoming Tokyo gubernatorial election with an antinuclear agenda after securing the backing of popular former Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi [...] The move [...] could have game-changing impact on the race for the helm of the Japanese capital [...] “I have made my decision to run in the Tokyo governor election,” Hosokawa told reporters after meeting Koizumi. “I have a sense of crisis myself that the country’s various problems, especially nuclear power plants, are matters of survival for the country.” [...] Koizumi indicated the main focus of the election will be whether to pursue nuclear power or not, calling the election “a war between the group that says Japan can grow with zero nuclear power plants” and the group that says it cannot. [...]
Asahi Shimbun, Jan. 14, 2014: [...] “I have a sense of crisis that various problems facing Japan today, especially the issue of nuclear power generation, will endanger the existence of our country,” Hosokawa said, explaining the reason for his candidacy. [...] Koizumi said the Tokyo gubernatorial election will be a contest between pro- and anti-nuclear forces. “My belief is that Japan will be able to do without nuclear energy. Hosokawa also has the same belief. That is the biggest reason for my support of him,” he said. [...] Koizumi told reporters, “I expressed my respects to Hosokawa from the heart. I will do my utmost so that Hosokawa wins the election.” Koizumi said the Tokyo gubernatorial election could have “the biggest influence ever on national politics.” “If the Tokyo metropolitan government shows that it can go without nuclear power generation, it will certainly be able to change Japan,” he said. Koizumi also said, “If Hosokawa becomes Tokyo governor, he will have a major influence that could shake national politics on the issues of energy and nuclear power generation.” [...]
Wall St. Journal, Jan. 14, 2014: [Former Prime Ministers Hosokawa and Koizumi] are expected to stir up the gubernatorial race and bring the energy debate back into the national spotlight. That will likely dismay of the administration of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, which would rather not have the divisive issue become an election focal point. [...] Mr. Hosokawa said [...] “I have a sense of crisis that our nation’s survival is at stake over nuclear power.”
Read More Here
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democracynow·
Published on Jan 17, 2014
http://www.democracynow.org
- Recent moves by the Japanese government to restart the country's
nuclear power plant facilities have been met by growing protests "I
think this is a problem of the world, not just of Japan," Kato Kaiko
told Democracy Now! at a protest outside the Prime Minister's private
residence in Tokyo. She describes how there is increasing expectation
that voters will decide which candidate to choose in the upcoming
election based on their position on nuclear power.Watch our entire special broadcast from Japan at http://www.democracynow.org/topics/japan......
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