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"Japanese Find Radioactivity on Their Own"

"IWAKI, Japan — Kiyoko Okoshi had a simple goal when she spent about $625 for a dosimeter: she missed her daughter and grandsons and wanted them to come home.

Local officials kept telling her that their remote village was safe, even though it was less than 20 miles from the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. But her daughter remained dubious, especially since no one from the government had taken radiation readings near their home.

So starting in April, Mrs. Okoshi began using her dosimeter to check nearby forest roads and rice paddies. What she found was startling. Near one sewage ditch, the meter beeped wildly, and the screen read 67 microsieverts per hour, a potentially harmful level. Mrs. Okoshi and a cousin who lives nearby worked up the courage to confront elected officials, who did not respond, confirming their worry that the government was not doing its job."

Ken Belson reports for the New York Times July 31, 2011.

SEE ALSO:

"Japanese Rice To Be Tested For Radioactive Cesium" (Reuters)

"Japan Vows To Skirt Nuclear Shutdown, Watchdog Embarassed" (Reuters)


"Japan July Nuclear Plant Usage Falls To 33.9 Percent" (Reuters)

"Fukushima Radiation Reaches Lethal Levels" (Guardian)

"Radioactive Leaf Soil Sold Nationwide After Gov't Prevention Measures Fail" (Mainichi Dail News)

"Fukushima People Seek Science Savvy on  Skepticism of Government" (Mainichi Daily News)

"Pockets of High Radiation Remind of Fukushima Plant Danger" (Reuters)

"Iwate Beef Cattle Shipments Banned" (Japan Times)

Source: NY Times, 08/02/2011