60,000 in Tokyo Protest Government Plans to Restart Nuclear Power 3rd June

Approx­i­mate­ly 60,000 peo­ple ral­lied in Japan’s cap­i­tal of Tokyo on Sun­day, June 2nd in order to protest recent gov­ern­ment plans to restart the country’s idled nuclear reac­tors. Peo­ple gath­ered in Shi­ba Park and lat­er marched towards the par­lia­ment build­ing. Among the orga­niz­ers was Ken­z­aburo Oe, a Nobel lit­er­a­ture lau­re­ate, who called on the Japan­ese gov­ern­ment to leave the nuclear pow­er plants in sus­pen­sion out of fears for safe­ty.

The Japan­ese gov­ern­ment has pre­vi­ous­ly stat­ed that it will most like­ly allow those reac­tors to return to pow­er which have been approved by the Nuclear Reg­u­la­tion Author­i­ty (NRA), whose new safe­ty guide­lines are sched­uled to be adopt­ed in July. One of Japan’s largest-ever protests saw 170,000 peo­ple gath­er in a sim­i­lar fash­ion in July 2012, around the same time that then-Prime Min­is­ter Yoshi­hiko Noda decid­ed on the first two reac­tor restarts since the March 2011 Fukushi­ma dis­as­ter. As of now, the anti-nuclear pro­tes­tors say they have col­lect­ed over 8 mil­lion sig­na­tures of those opposed to reac­tor restarts.

As they marched through the streets, the pro­tes­tors car­ried signs and ban­ners that had mes­sages such as “No Nukes! Unevolved Apes Want Nukes!” As of today, the two reac­tors that were restart­ed last sum­mer, locat­ed in Oi, Fukui Pre­fec­ture, are the only ones out the country’s 50 that have returned to oper­a­tion. While Sunday’s ral­ly was orga­nized between three dif­fer­ent groups, Kyo­do news report­ed that the Tokyo Met­ro­pol­i­tan Police Depart­ment had put the num­ber of pro­test­ers between 20,000 and 30,000.