Japan govt, Fukushima operator told to pay over nuclear disaster

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TOKYO, Feb 20, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – A Japanese court Wednesday awarded nearly
$4 million in fresh damages to scores of residents forced to flee their homes
after the 2011 Fukushima nuclear meltdown.

The Yokohama district court ordered the government and Tokyo Electric Power
Co (TEPCO) to pay 419.6 million yen ($3.8 million) to 152 local residents, a
court spokeswoman told AFP.

The verdict was the fifth time the government has been ruled liable for the
disaster in eastern Japan, the world’s most serious nuclear accident since
Chernobyl in 1986.

Presiding judge Ken Nakadaira said the government and TEPCO “could have
avoided the accident if they had taken measures” against the tsunami that
sparked the disaster, according to public broadcaster NHK.

In March last year, a court in Kyoto, western Japan, ruled both the
government and TEPCO were responsible and ordered them to pay 110 million yen
to 110 residents.

However, in a separate case in September 2017 in Chiba near Tokyo, the
court ruled that only the operator was liable.

Around 12,000 people who fled after the disaster due to radiation fears
have filed various lawsuits against the government and TEPCO.

Cases have revolved around whether the government and TEPCO, both of whom
are responsible for disaster prevention measures, could have foreseen the
scale of the tsunami and subsequent meltdown.

Dozens of class-action lawsuits have been filed seeking compensation from
the government.

Triggered by a 9.1-magnitude earthquake, the tsunami overwhelmed reactor
cooling systems, sending three into meltdown and sending radiation over a
large area.