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© KYODOStudents offered money, rewards for joining gov't events to promote nuclear waste disposal
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The requested article has expired, and is no longer available. Any related articles, and user comments are shown below.
© KYODO
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kiyoshiMukai
Only 36,000 ¥? Thats what I have in my wallet. For 12 kids thats only a meal
Stuart hayward
noriyosan73 Yes, I use a bike, my phone and IPad were charged with wind and solar.
My small house runs on only 30amps, most of that comes from a portable fuel cell generator, wind and solar cover the rest.
True, it's taken me several years to achieve this but it can be done even though I make a modest living.
Disillusioned
Possible attempt? This is a blatant attempt at perverting the outcome through bribery and favouritism. Oh. hang on! This is Japan. I forgot that this is how things are done in Japan.
Ah, you should have taken the blue pill. Japan has been without nuclear power for 6.5 years. I don't recall any power blackouts, do you? And, today they stated the economy has grown, which totally destroys your arguments of how fossil fuels drain the economy. Furthermore, let me add to your false perspective, nearly all of Japan's reactors will reach their use-by dates in the next decade or so, which means they all have to be upgraded or decommissioned at huge expense. Nuclear power is not clean, cheap or safe, no matter what you learned from the Japanese media Matrix. Then, after that sinks in, we can move onto nuclear waste. The highly radioactive debris from the meltdowns at Fukushima will cover 15 square kilometers after is has all been gathered. Cars, trucks, shops, houses, apartment blocks, factories, construction machinery and a few million tons of soil all have to be stored on land that used to be fertile farmland. All this is without counting the actual spent fuel rods that stay radioactive for up to a thousand years. These need to be stored and cooled in a safe housing that requires constant monitoring. Yeah, fossil fuels create CO2 and contribute to climate change, but nuclear power is much worse and leaves a much dirtier stain on the planet.
noriyosan73
Did anyone use an electric train or subway to go to the meeting, etc? No, they used their bicycles. Did anyone use a mobile to take pictures? No, they used hand-help generators to charge the phone. Did anyone use hand made paper on which he/she printed the message distributed to the public, then hold a sign so the TV coverage can show the message through free publicity? "You can't have your cake and eat it, too." Conservation of mass. Japan needs nuclear energy or a drain on of yen to buy oil to be used to make electricity.
Goodlucktoyou
there is something called "right and wrong". as an ex-doorman, you should at least have some instinct. nuclear waste takes from our lifetime to infinity to cause chaos on the health of animals and nature. we don't need to care about human life, as it seems the official practice of japanese politicians is to not care.
NB. what proof do you have about paid protesters? I've never been paid, in fact i give time and donate my money. my choice. no corruption.
Scrote
This isn't the first time this has happened and clearly no lessons have been learned. Somebody needs to be fired for wasting taxes, but of course they won't be.
kohakuebisu
It was stopped in the end, but when my town tried to push through an unwanted development about ten years ago, they insisted they had gone through the proper procedure and there had been a "public hearing", a phrase said in katakana and prominently used with relish as if it were the new all-conquering buzzword in local politics. No residents had heard about any such meeting, so if one had happened, it must have been insiders or stooges only.
This story only confirms my understanding of "public hearings".
HollisBrown
I'd be interested to know more about these students. Where are they studying? What are they studying? Why / How were they selected? Why just 12?
I predict there's more to it than meets the eye - for example have they already secured post graduate employment with industries linked to the waste disposal?
ALmost
Low, very low.
BeerDeliveryGuy
How is this different form the paid protestors at anti-security bill and anti-Okinawa base protests... move along...
gogogo
What a joke, planting paid actors in town hall meetings.... people need to goto jail.
Pukey2
Isn't this what we call bribery? Come on, let's not beat about bush.
smithinjapan
Good old Japan.
Alfie Noakes
Alex Einz
Sakura is a normal practice but this is ridiculous... how is it not illegal?
Stuart hayward
Students have been lured by money and other rewards to attend government events to promote public understanding linked to hosting final disposal sites for high-level radioactive nuclear waste, one of the organizers said Tuesday.
So the Nucler Waist Management of Japan, along with the Indusrtry minister, have hired students who are not land owners to convince the public how safe it is to burry high-level radioactive waist throughout Japan.
Yubaru
Compensation comes in many forms and if these "promises" were kept then they are guilty as charged!
If they were not kept, these students should pitch a fit and embarrass these nuts even more!