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Extremely serious levels of radiation have escaped. Dangerously high  doses of 
radiation have been detected in or near the compounds of the  quake-hit 
Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant in Fukushima Prefecture. 

Japan's worsening nuclear crisis will now be compared to the Chernobyl disaster 
in the former Soviet Union in 1986. 

The Fukushima plant has six reactors. Of them, the No. 2 reactor has  begun to 
release radioactive substances as the suppression pool  connected to the 
reactor 
containment vessel was apparently damaged. 

The No. 1 and No. 3 reactors are also in a perilous situation with their 
nuclear 
fuel rods exposed out of cooling water. 

An apparent hydrogen explosion has rattled the No. 4 reactor, whose  operation 
had been suspended for inspection when the magnitude-9  earthquake struck March 
11. Spent nuclear fuel rods kept in a pool with  circulating water appear to 
have produced hydrogen. If they are exposed  above water, then the dangers from 
the extremely strong radiation would  hamper work to bring the situation under 
control. 

Now, four nuclear reactors standing in a line are simultaneously spinning out 
of 
control. 

The immediate challenge is to cut off the sources of radiation leaks.  The work 
is dangerous, but this is a fight against time to keep the  contamination of 
the 
people and the land to a minimum. 

Japan's nuclear energy technology long accumulated through time and  money must 
be fully utilized to support the efforts of Tokyo Electric  Power Co., the 
plant's operator. 

To avoid exposure, action at an early stage is of vital importance. 
Radioactive materials are dispersed by the wind in tiny particles,  comparable 
to invisible smoke or dust. People must pay attention to wind  directions to 
avoid being caught in high concentrations of  radioactivity. 

The priority in evacuation must be put on children. The Chernobyl  disaster 
showed that the risk of young children developing thyroid  cancer is more than 
100 times greater than that for adults. Society must  share the idea that 
children should be the first ones protected from  radioactivity. 

Many people must be finding it difficult to believe the news unfolding before 
their eyes. 

The earthquake and tsunami of unprecedented scale in Japan may have caused this 
situation. 

But Japan should have developed nuclear energy not only with pride in  its 
advanced technology, but also with cautiousness as a nation hit by  atomic 
bombs. 

This is a consequence of the history of Japan, which has placed  nuclear power 
as a key pillar of its energy policy and enjoyed its  benefits in the postwar 
period. Society as a whole must accept this  consequence. 

People in areas battered by the killer temblor and tsunami need  homes, food 
and 
energy. Many people have lost their loved ones. They  must be supported by the 
entire Japanese society. 

The resilience of Japanese society is being questioned. 


http://www.asahi.com/english/TKY201103150148.html



      
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