People living in the affected zone were allowed by the government to take shuttles to their neighborhoods that were destroyed by the tsunami to gather whatever they could in a few hours before the government locked down the area with imposed fines of up to 10,000 yen or detainment for up to 30 days as outlined in a new nuclear emergency law.
"If people continue to live in the area, the cumulative radiation level may exceed 20 millisieverts a year," said Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano. "Considering the effect it may have on people's health, we would like those people to evacuate to a different location in an orderly manner."Initially, the people living within the affected area were asked to remain indoors during the first few days of the disaster at the plant. But early this week, it was disclosed that during those first few days the Japanese government had miscalculated the amount of contaminants being emitted by the reactors, with the level of pollution being more on par with that of Chernobyl instead of the lesser incident that occurred at Three Mile Island.
With those revelations coming to light and the newly imposed no access zone by the Japanese government, it raises the question of how much radiation were those roughly 70,000 residents in the contaminated area actually exposed to? And now that there is no timetable set for those people being allowed to return to their homes, where will an already crowded country fit all their displaced citizens?
Will the northeast coast of Japan be relegated to ghost towns and a grim reminder of the perils of nuclear power gone awry like the area surrounding the Chernobyl meltdown? When residents returned to gather belongings they got a brief taste of what their former towns might turn into during the coming years if contamination levels prevent them from returning in the immediate future. Cows still chained to their posts lay dead and rotting. Cars strewn about, displaced by the force of the tsunami and houses reduced to piles of mud and debris.
“It feels like my house is burning down, so I want to take as much as possible,” said Michiko Koyama, a resident of the affected area. “I don’t know how many years it will be before we can come back.”