WEBVTT 00:00:28.747 --> 00:00:32.282 Japan, it's everything I imagined it to be. 00:00:42.223 --> 00:00:47.227 Polite, quiet, overcrowded, a high-tech Mekka. 00:00:48.745 --> 00:00:57.090 [Lots of Japanese brands], all of them powered by nuclear energy. 00:00:57.955 --> 00:01:01.529 Some say, the ultimate expression of industrial civilization. 00:01:18.225 --> 00:01:24.888 On March 11th 2011, a powerful earthquake damaged the cooling equipment at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. 00:01:24.888 --> 00:01:28.891 Causing the reactors to overheat, and later melt down. 00:01:28.891 --> 00:01:32.661 Releasing dangerous radioactive materials into the air and water, 00:01:32.661 --> 00:01:39.066 these radioactive materials can have long-term damaging effects on millions of people, including cancer. 00:01:39.066 --> 00:01:43.542 And make large geographical areas uninhabitable for decades. 00:01:44.350 --> 00:01:47.567 This is a story about a country at a crossroads. 00:01:49.750 --> 00:01:53.578 Where technology and innovation are the proud achievements of a post-war nation. 00:01:55.508 --> 00:02:01.822 A story about how government and industry work together to blind the population to the dangers of radiation. 00:02:04.432 --> 00:02:10.227 But most importantly, this is a story of a rag-tag group of troublemakers 00:02:10.227 --> 00:02:16.006 who have kickstarted a massive anti-nuclear movement, in a country where dissent is frowned upon. 00:02:17.485 --> 00:02:22.443 This is a story of resistance to stop the flows of radiation. 00:02:37.513 --> 00:02:39.660 I am here to promote my film END:CIV, 00:02:39.660 --> 00:02:42.998 which proposes that all of this technological prowess, 00:02:42.998 --> 00:02:50.382 the things that Japanese society view as proof of their success, should be dismantled, to save what is left of nature on the planet. 00:02:50.382 --> 00:02:54.270 Nine months ago, many Japanese people would have thought that I was out of my mind, 00:02:54.270 --> 00:02:59.280 but the reality of the Fukushima nuclear meltdown has made some Japanese people reconsider. 00:02:59.760 --> 00:03:13.427 We have to know that our civilization produced the nuclear power plants, it also produces plutonium. 00:03:13.427 --> 00:03:22.838 The civilization us human beings created and it have like, you know such a disaster. 00:03:22.838 --> 00:03:28.544 This is a very deep, you know, problem. We have to change how to live. 00:03:28.544 --> 00:03:39.187 It's a very big answer, but you know this is also one of a important goal for many people. 00:03:40.373 --> 00:03:47.361 But before I tell you the story of the unlikely band of heroes of the anti-nuke movement, here are some not so randam facts: 00:03:50.951 --> 00:04:00.157 1: In August of 1945 the US attacked the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki with two nuclear bombs named Fat Man and Little Boy. 00:04:00.157 --> 00:04:03.010 Killing more than 100,000 people. 00:04:03.710 --> 00:04:12.275 2: By 1950, about 200,000 people in Hiroshama and Nagasaki died of radiation related illnesses or side-effects. 00:04:13.789 --> 00:04:21.195 3: In 1954 the Japanese nuclear power program was started by war criminal Matsutarō Shōriki, 00:04:21.195 --> 00:04:25.261 while working for the CIA and with the support of the US government. 00:04:25.261 --> 00:04:29.636 Shōriki is also credited with bringing American baseball and commercial television to Japan. 00:04:34.682 --> 00:04:40.071 4: The menace of nuclear radiation is deeply ingrained in Japanese popular culture, 00:04:40.071 --> 00:04:45.285 most famously in the Godzilla franchise, and the anime film Akira. 00:04:48.325 --> 00:04:54.073 5: In Japan the police can arrest you and hold you without charge for up to 23 days. 00:04:56.428 --> 00:05:04.164 6: About 30,000 people commit suicide in Japan every year, one of the highest rates of suicide in the world. 00:05:04.164 --> 00:05:09.145 This last factoid helped explain why Wataru Tsurimi, the man you see sitting next to me, 00:05:09.145 --> 00:05:12.880 wrote the book entitled The Complete Manual of Suicide. 00:05:12.880 --> 00:05:16.788 A detailed illustrated guide on how to end your life. 00:05:16.788 --> 00:05:19.562 Apperently levels of depression in Japan are so high 00:05:19.562 --> 00:05:25.286 that even with the introduction of anti-depressants the rate of suicides does not seem to diminish. 00:05:25.486 --> 00:05:29.250 Throughout my stay here the question that kept bugging me was this: 00:05:29.250 --> 00:05:36.370 With all it's wealth and technology, why are people in Japan so unhappy? Nah... scratch that. 00:05:36.370 --> 00:05:42.309 The question was: if the achievements of industrialization are destroying the soul and health of the Japanese, 00:05:42.309 --> 00:05:46.273 was it worth the risk to power the country with nuclear plants? 00:05:46.891 --> 00:05:52.387 As I write this, the Japanese government made an announcement that the meltdown was finally contained. 00:05:52.387 --> 00:05:55.824 That's nearly nine months after the disaster. 00:05:55.824 --> 00:06:03.398 Nine months of radioactive contamination escaping into the world's atmosphere, that is, if you believe the government is telling the truth. 00:06:03.398 --> 00:06:05.599 But just how bad is it? 00:06:17.759 --> 00:06:21.865 Judging from life in Fukushima city, it can't be all that bad. 00:06:21.865 --> 00:06:25.521 Walking around the city you get the sense that it's business as usual. 00:06:25.521 --> 00:06:34.730 After all, Fukushima city is about 80km from the nuclear power plant, well beyond the 20km evacuation zone enforced by the government. 00:06:34.730 --> 00:06:37.965 But the problem with radiation is that it's odorless and invisible. 00:06:37.965 --> 00:06:43.637 So it's easy for people to forget that their bodies are being attacked by radioactive particles. 00:06:50.241 --> 00:06:53.496 Wataru Iwata is a proffessional musician. 00:06:53.496 --> 00:07:00.281 After the disaster he left his home in Tokyo and travelled south to Kyoto, in fear of being exposed to radiation. 00:07:00.281 --> 00:07:08.142 He had planned on leaving Japan permanently, but his conscience got the better of him and instead of escaping he moved to Fukushima city 00:07:08.142 --> 00:07:11.798 and helped found the Citizens' Radioactivity Measurement Station. 00:07:11.798 --> 00:07:15.685 A group dedicated to measuring levels of radiation in food and humans. 00:07:16.173 --> 00:07:23.381 After the accident, the government set an evacuation zone from 3km, 00:07:23.381 --> 00:07:30.999 then it became 5, and then 10, and it stops at 20km. 00:07:32.819 --> 00:07:38.297 And then the government says: It's ok, it's safe. 00:07:39.569 --> 00:07:42.222 When I first met Wataru he showed me some measurements 00:07:42.222 --> 00:07:49.766 on a plastic scintillator, and told me that background radiation that day was about 6 times higher than what is safe for humans. 00:07:49.766 --> 00:07:53.841 The soil about 16 times higher, and the water almost 18 times higher. 00:07:53.841 --> 00:07:57.278 Yet kids continued to play on the dirt, mothers continued 00:07:57.278 --> 00:08:03.552 to hang their clothes outdoors, and the government continues to play up the narrative that everything is ok. 00:08:04.224 --> 00:08:07.223 I want people to evacuate, if they can. 00:08:07.223 --> 00:08:12.328 Especially people who have children, small children. 00:08:21.468 --> 00:08:27.741 Today I am meeting with several anti-nuke activists in Chiyoda, a section of Tokyo that holds many government buildings 00:08:27.741 --> 00:08:32.648 and is also the home of Tepco, the owner of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. 00:08:36.244 --> 00:08:40.394 We're here because a high profile member of the anti-nuke movement is being released from jail. 00:08:40.394 --> 00:08:44.803 The activist did not want to release his name and simply identified him as 'A'. 00:08:52.753 --> 00:08:57.322 A was arrested at an anti-racist rally while carrying an anti-nuke banner. 00:08:57.334 --> 00:09:00.276 He was being held without charge for twelve days, 00:09:00.276 --> 00:09:07.416 and the day he was released he was supposed to go to a hearing where the state wanted to argue that he be held for an additional eleven days. 00:09:07.416 --> 00:09:10.819 So his comrades were surprised and elated at his release. 00:09:10.819 --> 00:09:15.155 An impromptu celebration was held a block away in front of the headquarters of Tepco, 00:09:15.155 --> 00:09:19.094 where activists have had a protest encampment since March. 00:09:26.624 --> 00:09:33.842 He told me that the reason why the state is trying to crush the anti-nuke movement is because it has connected and unified all the 00:09:33.842 --> 00:09:38.068 social struggles in Japan, creating one massive movement. 00:09:38.068 --> 00:09:43.150 He also told me that he believes that the Japanese state will not meet the demands of the anti-nuke movement, 00:09:43.150 --> 00:09:46.261 which includes the end of nuclear power in Japan. 00:09:59.800 --> 00:10:02.504 Korangi, April 10th 2011. 00:10:02.504 --> 00:10:11.446 Exactly one month since the nuclear disaster, more than 15,000 people take part in a sound demonstration to demand an end to nuclear power. 00:10:11.446 --> 00:10:14.281 This is why the government is so scared. 00:10:14.281 --> 00:10:20.321 To put it in context, there hasn't been a large grassroots protest movement in Japans since the 70's. 00:10:20.321 --> 00:10:23.758 With a brief spike in the run-up to the US war with Iraq. 00:10:23.758 --> 00:10:31.018 Activism is not looked upon favorably by the Japanese society, so a protest of even a 1,000 people is a major event. 00:10:31.738 --> 00:10:37.949 The same group who organized this music-driven demonstration has pulled up similar numbers every month since the first month. 00:10:37.949 --> 00:10:45.781 The organizers of these sound demos are a variety of loose collectives. 00:10:45.781 --> 00:10:56.359 The HRP, like people from a place called Korangi, which is the location for Shiroto no Ran. 00:10:59.660 --> 00:11:03.865 And yeah it's basically... no NGO is involved. 00:11:03.865 --> 00:11:08.571 The last group Kaori mentioned, Shiroto no Ran, translates to Amateur Riot. 00:11:08.571 --> 00:11:15.612 Amateur Riot is not your garden variety activist group, but a collective of folks who opened twelve shops in the neighbourhood of Korangi. 00:11:15.612 --> 00:11:20.909 The shops range from bars and restaurants to recycle shops, like the one this gentleman operates. 00:11:22.191 --> 00:11:26.059 That's Hajime Matsumoto, one of the founders of Amateur Riot. 00:11:26.462 --> 00:11:30.025 He explains that public space has been rapidly disappearing in Tokyo. 00:11:30.025 --> 00:11:37.331 So opening shops was a way for them to reclaim space and have multiple locations to socialize and plot their actions. 00:11:38.011 --> 00:11:44.707 One of the spaces that has been instrumental to the success of the anti-nuke protests is Irregular Rhythm Asylum. 00:11:44.707 --> 00:11:52.315 For the past nine years Narita Keisuke has been running the tiny anarchist infoshop that also serves as an impromptu restaurant, 00:11:52.315 --> 00:11:56.583 meeting room and web-design studio in the ward of Shinjuku. 00:11:56.583 --> 00:12:00.287 Also the site of the largest grassroots anti-nuke demo to date. 00:12:16.980 --> 00:12:23.010 Some people want to forget radiation, 00:12:23.490 --> 00:12:27.992 so they can go back to their daily life. 00:12:28.283 --> 00:12:38.254 We did feel a big, big shake from the earthquake, but it was only that moment, that we felt like emergency or we felt danger. 00:12:38.254 --> 00:12:44.254 And now everything's gone back to normal, everyone is like consuming, consuming, consuming... 00:12:44.254 --> 00:12:54.241 And we just wanted to raise awareness that this isn't the normal state that it used to be, and that we're living in a nuclear polluted country. 00:12:54.241 --> 00:13:01.649 It's a no compromise movement. We want to shut down all nuclear plants in Japan and never let them open again. 00:13:02.049 --> 00:13:08.757 These sound demos have energized the youth, who are new to any sort of dissent, and had given the Japanese people a glimpse 00:13:08.757 --> 00:13:11.592 of what they can achieve when they stick together. 00:13:12.125 --> 00:13:15.796 Even though Japan's grassroots anti-nuke movement is in it's infancy, 00:13:15.796 --> 00:13:19.733 the people I spoke to truly believe they can stop nuclear power in their country. 00:13:20.701 --> 00:13:28.041 For people who doubt that this is possible, one only needs to look to Germany's anti-nuke movement, who after massive protests 00:13:28.041 --> 00:13:33.515 following the Fukushima disaster, put enough pressure on the government to effectively shut down nuclear power for good. 00:13:34.372 --> 00:13:39.516 Narita Keisuke sums up his comrades' can-do, yet irreverent attitude, with this phrase: 00:13:43.717 --> 00:13:46.996 Ladies and gentleman, you ain't seen nothing yet.