Unexplained plumes of radioactive steam have been rising from Fukushima's Reactor Building 3. TEPCO has confirmed the reports, adding that they were not clear on the details of the sudden change at the reactor because of "lethal radiation levels in that building." Meanwhile some experts think that "the situation could escalate rapidly out of control."
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Unexplained
plumes of radioactive steam have been rising from Fukushima's Reactor
Building 3. TEPCO has confirmed the reports, adding that they were not
clear on the details of the sudden change at the reactor because of
"lethal radiation levels in that building."
Fukushima's
Reactor Building 3 exploded on 13th March 2011 as a result of a hydrogen
buildup, breaching the building's containment and emitting a huge plume
of radiation. The reactor itself is in meltdown.
And
now fresh plumes of steam have been seen coming out the structure. These
have now been confirmed by TEPCO, the owner of the nuclear plant, from
19th December onwards. The company believes the steam is coming from the
fifth floor of the building.
However it does not know
the cause of the steam. Lethal levels of radiation and the physical
damage to the structure have so far made entry and inspection
impossible.
Summations from experts conclude that this
may "be the beginning of a 'spent fuel pool criticality (meltdown)'
involving up to 89 tons of nuclear fuel burning up into the atmosphere
and heading to North America."
Educated guesses suggest that the steam is "coming from what’s left of the fifth floor of the mostly-destroyed building."
TEPCO
has admitted that "they do not know why this steam is being generated,
but matter-of-factly revealed today (December 28) the steam was first
spotted on December 19 for a short period of time, then again on
December 24 and again on December 25."
The accord is
that "pellets of radioactive fuel, ejected when the reactor exploded,
went into the spent fuel pool located above the reactor and have begun
melting down so seriously they are boiling off the water in the spent
fuel pool."
Should this be the case "the situation could escalate rapidly out of control."
TRN
is warning of preparatory measures that should be taken by those living
on the West Coast of America because after the "releasing 89 tons of
deadly radioactive fuel directly into the air", it would be a matter or 2
to 3 days before the deadly material would fry North America "by [the]
levels of airborne radiation and ‘hot particles’ which could kill."
Homeless
people in Japan are being paid less than minimum wage to clean up the
Fukushima nuclear disaster, and often end up in debt once their
accommodation is docked from wages. According to a special report by Reuters,
the clean-up of the 2011 nuclear spill has become a playing ground for
profiteering gangsters who are taking advantage of the need for cheap
labour.
One recruiter, Seiji Sasa, explained how he is
one of many who visit the Sendai Station every day to round up homeless
men desperate for food and shelter as temperatures drop to near
freezing.
Sasa is paid $100 (£60) per person he recruits to work on the $35bn taxpayer-funded clean-up operation.
Despite being one of the most undesirable jobs in the world, homeless men will accept minimum wage, if not less.
The
practice of using homeless has become increasingly prevalent, with
Japanese gangsters infiltrating the Fukushima labour broker industry and
companies with contracts on the operation.
Most construction companies involved use temporary workers hired by subcontractors run by gangers and illegal brokers.
Arrests
were made after the construction giant Obayashi Corporation's
decontamination subcontractors were infiltrated, with members of the
yakuza illegally sending workers to the site.
In
October, men were rounded up and put to work clearing radioactive soil
in Fukushima City for less than minimum wage. The most radioactive areas
are most lucrative because of the $100 hazard allowance allocated per
worker per day.
The report found that problems have
risen because no one is taking responsibility for the hiring and safety
of staff coming from hundreds of small firms involved in the clean-up.
"In
reality, major contractors manage each work site," said Hide Motonaga,
deputy director of the radiation clean-up division of the environment
ministry.
"If you started looking at every single
person, the project wouldn't move forward. You wouldn't get a tenth of
the people you need," said Yukio Suganuma, president of Aisogo Service, a
construction company hired in 2012 to clean up radioactive fallout in
Tamura.
After hiring the homeless, Reuters found that
workers are handed on through a chain of companies, during which time
just a third of the money meant for wages reached them. After deductions
for food and accommodation, some homeless men actually went into debt;
others ended up with around $10 each month.
Yasuhiro
Aoki, a Baptist pastor and homeless advocate, said: "Many homeless
people are just put into dormitories, and the fees for lodging and food
are automatically docked from their wages. Then at the end of the month,
they're left with no pay at all."
Shizuya Nishiyama,
57, was recruited for clean-up work but said homelessness was a
preferable option as he would not get into debt: "We're an easy target
for recruiters. We turn up here with all our bags, wheeling them around
and we're easy to spot. They say to us, are you looking for work? Are
you hungry? And if we haven't eaten, they offer to find us a job."
Speaking
to Reuters about the ethics of recruiting, Sasa said: "I don't ask
questions; that's not my job. I just find people and send them to work. I
send them and get money in exchange. That's it. I don't get involved in
what happens after that."
Shit
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