Chants of ‘No Nukes’ Echo in Streets of Tokyo’s Shibuya and Harajuku Districts

Screen Shot 2013-10-01 at 4.42.55 PMWith an eye to get­ting their mes­sage out to young peo­ple, demon­stra­tors call­ing for a depar­ture from nuclear pow­er on Sept.

Screen Shot 2013-10-01 at 4.42.55 PMWith an eye to get­ting their mes­sage out to young peo­ple, demon­stra­tors call­ing for a depar­ture from nuclear pow­er on Sept. 29 changed course from their usu­al venue and took to the streets in Tokyo’s trendy Shibuya and Hara­juku dis­tricts.

Pro­test­ers shout­ed slo­gans such as “We’ve got enough elec­tric pow­er” and “No nuke reac­tors on earth­quake-prone islands” as they marched past Marui City Shibuya and oth­er fash­ion­able com­mer­cial estab­lish­ments packed with trend-con­scious youths.

The “No Nukes Demo” was the brain­child of the Met­ro­pol­i­tan Coali­tion against Nukes, a civ­il advo­ca­cy group that orga­nizes week­ly anti-nuclear protest ral­lies out­side the prime minister’s office on Fri­day evenings in Tokyo’s Nagat­a­cho dis­trict. Orga­niz­ers said they thought that the nation’s youths are not even aware that all 50 exist­ing nuclear pow­er reac­tors in Japan are cur­rent­ly offline, for main­te­nance and safe­ty checks.

The march fol­lowed a ral­ly in Nagat­a­cho on Sept. 27 oppos­ing Tokyo Elec­tric Pow­er Co.’s appli­ca­tion to the Nuclear Reg­u­la­tion Author­i­ty for safe­ty screen­ing of two reac­tors at its Kashi­waza­ki-Kari­wa nuclear plant in Niiga­ta Pre­fec­ture, as a pre­lude to their pos­si­ble restart.