Beyond radiation
risks, an unexpected nuisance looms for Japanese returning to towns vacated
after the Fukushima nuclear crisis six years ago
– wild boars.
Hundreds of the
animals, which have been known to attack people when enraged, descended from surrounding hills and forests into towns left
deserted after the 2011 disaster.
Now they roam the empty
streets and overgrown backyards of Japan’s deserted seaside town of Namie,
foraging for food.
“It is not really clear now which is the
master of the town, people or wild boars,” said Tamotsu Baba, mayor of the
town, which has been partially cleared for people to return home freely at the
end of the month.
“If we don’t get rid
of them and turn this into a human-led town, the situation will get even wilder
and uninhabitable.”
At the end of March,
Japan is set to lift evacuation orders for parts of Namie, located just 4km
from the wrecked nuclear plant, as well as three other towns.
Residents fled to escape
radiation spewed by the Fukushima Daiichi plant, whose reactors went into
meltdown after it was struck by an earthquake and tsunami on 11
March 2011.
In the nearby town of
Tomioka, hunter Shoichiro Sakamoto leads a team of 13 assigned to catch and
kill the wild boars with air rifles.
Twice a week, they set
about 30 cage traps, using rice flour as bait.
“After people left,
they began coming down from the mountains and now they are not going back,” he
said.
“They found a place
that was comfortable. There was plenty of food and no one to come after them.”
Since last April, the squad has captured about
300 of the animals, and intends to keep up its work even after the evacuation
orders are scrapped, Sakamoto added.
More than half of
Namie’s former 21,500 residents have decided not to return, however, a
Government survey showed last year, citing concerns over radiation and the
safety of the nuclear plant, which is being decommissioned.
But at town meetings
earlier this year to prepare for the homecoming, residents had voiced worries
about the wild boars.
“I’m sure officials at
all levels are giving some thought to this,” said Hidezo Sato, a former seed
merchant in Namie. “Something must be done.”
FROM THE DESK OF ANIMAL RIGHTS WRITERS ASSOCIATION OF NIGERIA.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/fukushima-wild-boars-running-riot-namie-hunt-kill-nuclear-disaster-evacuation-a7621071.html
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