快猫短视频

US soldiers sue over Fukushima radiation exposure

Twenty-four US military personnel deployed to the Fukushima meltdown are claiming $2 billion in compensation for alleged radiation-induced health problems

Fukushima鈥檚 financial fallout is far from over. US military personnel and their families are seeking $2 billion in damages for illnesses they believe were caused by the nuclear plant鈥檚 meltdown. They allege that the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO), the plant鈥檚 operator, misrepresented the amount of radiation present when it accepted US military assistance to deal with the crisis.

Soldiers aboard the USS Ronald Reagan, which rerouted from Korea to assist after reactors at Fukushima went into meltdown in 2011, have filed a lawsuit against TEPCO in the District Court for the Southern District of California. So far, 24 people are claiming damages, but , a lawyer based in San Diego, California, who is representing the plaintiffs, says that the 70,000 US military personnel and families stationed in or near Japan at the time could be party to the suit if they wish.

The plaintiffs claim that the Fukushima radiation leak caused leukaemias, testicular cancer, vision problems and gynaecological bleeding, among other illnesses.

鈥淚t seems like a pattern, a lot of cancers,鈥 says Garner. TEPCO has not responded to 快猫短视频鈥檚 request for comment.

The Pentagon has put together an to document radiation levels in Japan and surrounding areas where military staff might have been. According to the website, all the known levels are far too low to cause harm. That concurs with a recent which found that infants in the immediate vicinity of the stricken plant may have a slightly increased risk of developing some cancers, but that the risk to adults is low.

of Columbia University in New York says that although leukaemia can develop within a brief period after exposure to radiation, 鈥渁t the doses of relevance here, one would not expect much else by way of health effects in the first two years鈥.

TEPCO鈥檚 legal issues don鈥檛 end there. Earlier this month, over 1600 residents from around the Fukushima area filed a lawsuit with Fukushima District Court, demanding compensation for psychological damage and displacement.

Topics: Cancer / Environment / Nuclear technology