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Japan mulls limited access to zone near nuke plant

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TOKYO -- Authorities may for the first time ban access to the evacuation zone around Japan’s crippled nuclear plant, citing concerns yesterday over radiation risks for residents who may be returning to check on their homes.

About 70,000-80,000 people were living in the 10 towns and villages within 12 miles (20 kilometers) of the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant, which has been leaking radiation after a March 11 earthquake and tsunami wrecked its power and cooling systems.

Virtually all left after being advised to do so, but some occasionally have returned, defying warnings from police who have set up roadblocks on only a few major roads in the area.

“We are considering setting up ‘caution areas’ as an option for effectively limiting entry” to the zone,” Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano said.

Noriyuki Shikata, one of Edano’s deputies, said the government was still considering details of how to control access to the immediate vicinity of the nuclear plant while also responding to demands from residents to check their homes and collect belongings.

Now that the situation at the plant appears to have stabilized somewhat, both residents and the authorities are considering how to best weather a protracted evacuation. Only a few warning signs, mainly about road conditions, have been erected in the area so far.

“There are a number of people who may be entering the area. Under the current regime, we are not in a position to legally enforce – there’s no penalty for entering into the area. There is a realization of a need to have a stronger enforcement of the area,” Shikata said.

At present, police just keep track of people entering the evacuation zone by noting down their license plate numbers. Officials say one chief concern is that if there were a major accident, tracking down those inside would be difficult if not impossible.

It was unclear when the restrictions on entry into the area might be imposed.

In a step toward restoring the crippled nuclear plant’s cooling systems, Tokyo Electric Power Co., the nuclear plant’s operator, is pumping highly radioactive water from the basement of one of its turbine buildings to a makeshift storage area.

Removal of the first 10,000 metric tons (2.6 million gallons) of 25,000 metric tons (about 6.6 million gallons) of contaminated water that has collected just in the basement of the turbine building at Unit 2 of the plant began Tuesday and is expected to take at least 20 days, nuclear safety officials say. Fully ridding the plant of 70,000 tons (about 18.5 million gallons) of contaminated water in its turbine buildings and nearby trenches could take months.

Still, a senior official at the UN nuclear agency suggested the worst of the radiation leaks may be over in the worst nuclear power accident since the 1986 catastrophe in Chernobyl.

AREA

CHERNOBYL

CHIEF CABINET SECRETARY YUKIO EDANO

EDANO

FUKUSHIMA DAI

NORIYUKI SHIKATA

NUCLEAR

PLANT

SHIKATA

TOKYO ELECTRIC POWER CO

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