Japan Update: As of 21:30, 12 April, TOKYO
Despite the precautions for worker safety at Fukushima No. 1, there is concern.
“Some workers may have radiation-caused symptoms after several years,” said Atsushi Suzuki, a lawyer who previously handled a labor disaster compensation issue for a nuclear power plant worker.
Suzuki represented a man who worked at the Fukushima No. 1 plant from 1977 to 1982 as a plumber and on other jobs.
After he left the workplace, he was diagnosed as suffering from multiple myeloma, a deadly bone marrow cancer. He died in 2007.
The man was recognized to have died from exposure to radiation. In a suit seeking compensation, however, TEPCO did not acknowledge its responsibility. As a result, his demand for compensation was rejected.
“It is extremely difficult to prove scientifically the cause-and-effect-relationship between exposure to radiation and a disease that broke out later,” Suzuki said. “I think that people currently engaged in recovery work (at the Fukushima No. 1 plant) do not have the leeway to prevent exposure to radiation by themselves. It is necessary for the government and TEPCO to fully consider sufficient prevention measures and compensation (to those who suffered radiation-caused diseases).”
News Source; Asahi.com
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