Fukushima
Fraud and Corruption: Japanese Organized Crime Involved in Recruitment of
“Specialized Personnel”
Global Research, October 25, 2013
What
prevails is a well organized camouflage. The public health disaster in Japan,
the contamination of water, agricultural land and the food chain, not to
mention the broader economic and social implications, have neither been fully
acknowledged nor addressed in a comprehensive and meaningful fashion by the
Japanese authorities.
The
crisis in Japan has been described as “a nuclear war without a war”. In the
words of renowned novelist Haruki Murakami:
“This
time no one dropped a bomb on us ... We set the stage, we committed the crime
with our own hands, we are destroying our own lands, and we are destroying our
own lives.”
Several
Global Research reports and background articles have outlined the dangers of
Worldwide radiation resulting from the Fukushima disaster.
This
disaster is now being sustained and aggravated by the incompetence of TEPCO as
well as political camouflage by the Abe government.
We
are dealing with the coordination of a multibillion dollar decontamination
operation, which directly involves Japan’s organized crime, the Yakusa in the
process of recruitment of personnel for dangerous tasks.
The
Yakuza labor practices at Fukishima are based on a system of subcontracting,
which does not favor the hiring of competent specialized personnel. It creates
an environment of fraud and incompetence, which in the case of Fukushima could
have devastating consequences.
Fukushima
in the wake of the Tsunami, March 2011
This
role of Japanese organized crime also pertains to the removal of the fuel rods
from Reactor no. 4. As documented in several GR articles, this undertaking –if
mishandled– could potentially lead to a massive radioactive fallout:
An
operation with potentially “apocalyptic” consequences is expected to begin in a
little over two
weeks from now – “as early as November 8″ – at Fukushima’s damaged
and sinking Reactor 4, when plant operator TEPCO will attempt to remove
over 1300 spent fuel rods holding the radiation equivalent of 14,000 Hiroshima
bombs from a spent fuel storage tank perched on the reactor’s upper floor.
To
remove the rods, TEPCO has erected a 273-ton mobile crane above the building
that will be operated remotely from a separate room….
Fukushima
and the Yakusa
A
recent Reuters report documents in detail the role of Japan’s Yakusa and its
insidious relationship to both TEPCO as well as agencies of the Japanese
government including the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare:
The
complexity of Fukushima contracts and the shortage of workers have played into
the hands of the yakuza, Japan’s organized crime syndicates, which have run
labor rackets for generations.
Nearly
50 gangs with 1,050 members operate in Fukushima prefecture dominated by three
major syndicates – Yamaguchi-gumi, Sumiyoshi-kai and Inagawa-kai, police say.
Ministries,
the companies involved in the decontamination and decommissioning work, and
police have set up a task force to eradicate organized crime from the nuclear
clean-up project. Police investigators say they cannot crack down on the gang
members they track without receiving a complaint. They also rely on major
contractors for information.
In
a rare prosecution involving a yakuza executive, Yoshinori Arai, a boss in a
gang affiliated with the Sumiyoshi-kai, was convicted of labor law violations.
Arai admitted pocketing around $60,000 over two years by skimming a third of
wages paid to workers in the disaster zone. In March a judge gave him an
eight-month suspended sentence because Arai said he had resigned from the gang
and regretted his actions.
Arai
was convicted of supplying workers to a site managed by Obayashi, one of
Japan’s leading contractors, in Date, a town northwest of the Fukushima plant.
Date was in the path of the most concentrated plume of radiation after the
disaster.
A
police official with knowledge of the investigation said Arai’s case was just
“the tip of the iceberg” in terms of organized crime involvement in the
clean-up.
A
spokesman for Obayashi said the company “did not notice” that one of its subcontractors
was getting workers from a gangster.
“In
contracts with our subcontractors we have clauses on not cooperating with
organized crime,” the spokesman said, adding the company was working with the
police and its subcontractors to ensure this sort of violation does not happen
again.
In
April, the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare sanctioned three companies for
illegally dispatching workers to Fukushima. One of those, a Nagasaki-based
company called Yamato Engineering, sent 510 workers to lay pipe at the nuclear
plant in violation of labor laws banning brokers. All three companies were
ordered by labor regulators to improve business practices, records show.
In
2009, Yamato Engineering was banned from public works projects because of a
police determination that it was “effectively under the control of organized
crime,” according to a public notice by the Nagasaki-branch of the land and
transport ministry. Yamato Engineering had no immediate comment.
…
In
towns and villages around the plant in Fukushima, thousands of workers wielding
industrial hoses, operating mechanical diggers and wearing dosimeters to
measure radiation have been deployed to scrub houses and roads, dig up topsoil
and strip trees of leaves in an effort to reduce background radiation so that
refugees can return home.
Hundreds
of small companies have been given contracts for this decontamination work.
Nearly 70 percent of those surveyed in the first half of 2013 had broken labor
regulations, according to a labor ministry report in July. The ministry’s
Fukushima office had received 567 complaints related to working conditions in
the decontamination effort in the year to March. It issued 10 warnings. No firm
was penalized.
One
of the firms that has faced complaints is Denko Keibi, which before the
disaster used to supply security guards for construction sites. (Special Report: Help wanted in
Fukushima: Low pay, high risks and gangsters, by Antoni
Slodkowski and Mari Saito, Reuters, October 25, 2013)
(To
Read Reuters article click:
In
the face of ceaseless media disinformation pertaining to the dangers of global
nuclear radiation, our objective at GR has been to break the media vacuum and
raise public awareness, while also pointing to the complicity of the governments,
the media and the nuclear industry.
We
call upon our readers to spread the word.
Copyright © 2013 Global Research
No comments:
Post a Comment