Mikio Watanabe holds a picture of his late wife |
The operator of the stricken Fukushima nuclear power plant could face
a barrage of lawsuits after a Japanese court ruled that it was to blame
for a suicide, following the disaster of March 2011 that led to
catastrophic fallout for the nation.
The Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) has been struggling with
the consequences of the post-earthquake nuclear leak for three
years now, without notable success and with much blame directed
at it for the mishandling of the crisis.
Now, a lawsuit by Mikio Watanabe, a resident of Fukushima
Prefecture, is causing trouble for the power plant operator.
Watanable’s wife, Hamako, 58, suffered severe depression in the
wake of the tragedy, and committed suicide by dousing herself in
gasoline and setting herself on fire.
The nuclear utility will have to pay 49 million yen ($472,000) in
damages in a first-of-its-kind ruling in the three years since
the July tsunami and earthquake released a wave of deadly
radiation into the environment and derailed the surrounding
settlements’ way of life for decades to come.
The Watanabe household was one such case. Their home was located
about 40 kilometers away from Reactor 1. When the couple and
their relatives were relocated, Hamako’s mental state began to
seriously deteriorate. It is said she could not foresee a future
away from her home.
The truth hit especially hard when the chicken farm the couple
had been tending after the incident closed in June the following
year.
It was later learned that she had also had sleeping problems and
was on medication for it prior to the accident at the power
plant.
"We would like to deeply apologize again for the disruption
and concern that the Fukushima Daiichi accident caused to many
people, first and foremost the people of Fukushima," TEPCO
told the press following the ruling.
"We understand that there has been a verdict handed down in
this case. We will study the verdict and respond in a sincere
way," the statement added. "We pray that Hamako Watanabe
has found peace."
Mikio Watanabe told Reuters that he was “satisfied with the
decision,” adding that he believed his wife would have been
too.
Although this is considered to be a landmark ruling, TEPCO is
believed to have settled a few suicide-related disputes in the
past, but it won’t release numbers or figures. The only known
case to date concerned the family of a bereaved farmer, but it
was an out-of-court settlement that took place before the
catastrophe at the plant.
One litigant, Toru Takeda, 73, also expressed his agreement with
the Watanabe verdict, believing that it should go some way to
settling his own dispute with the power company. He has been
unable to return home following the events of 2011.
"Our verdict will come next month from the same court, so, of
course, we welcome this outcome," he told the agency.
According to Watanabe’s lawyer, Tsuguo Hirota, the suit against
TEPCO now threatens to set a major precedent for similar claims
by others who have been affected by the catastrophic fallout.
They number 150,000, or about 50,000 households.
Those thousands have lost their homes and way of life. The
majority remain displaced, while about a third, among them
Watanabe, have been provided temporary housing, amid nationwide
efforts at decontamination and nuclear cleanup of the surrounding
area.
Apart from affecting residents’ livelihoods, the local fauna has
been irreparably damaged.
It is estimated that the wider cleanup effort will last for
several decades and cost billions of dollars.
Reuters
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