[A trio of former executives from the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant
will be indicted over the 2011 accident, a judicial review panel
decided today, paving the way for the first criminal trial linked to
the disaster.
The decision comes after prosecutors twice refused to press charges
against the men, saying they had insufficient evidence and little
chance of conviction.
...
The decision is the latest in a tussle between legal authorities and
the public over who should take responsibility for the tsunami-sparked
reactor meltdowns that forced tens of thousands from their homes in
the worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl.*** [emphasis added.]

http://www.ndtv.com/world-news/former-fukushima-executives-to-be-charges-over-2011-nuclear-disaster-1202464

Former Fukushima Executives to be Charged over 2011 Nuclear Disaster
World | Agence France-Presse | Updated: July 31, 2015 15:56 IST

File Photo: An employee of Kyushu Electric Power Co at the company's
Sendai nuclear plant in Japan (Reuters)

TOKYO:  ***A trio of former executives from the crippled Fukushima
nuclear plant will be indicted over the 2011 accident, a judicial
review panel decided today, paving the way for the first criminal
trial linked to the disaster.*** [Emphasis added.]

***The decision comes after prosecutors twice refused to press charges
against the men, saying they had insufficient evidence and little
chance of conviction.*** [Emphasis added.]

But the independent panel today ruled - for the second time since the
accident - that the executives should be put on trial, compelling
prosecutors to press on with the criminal case under Japanese law.

***The decision is the latest in a tussle between legal authorities
and the public over who should take responsibility for the
tsunami-sparked reactor meltdowns that forced tens of thousands from
their homes in the worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl.***
[emphasis added.]

The trio are former Tokyo Electric Power chairman Tsunehisa Katsumata,
then-vice president Sakae Muto and former vice president Ichiro
Takekuro.

"The victims have wanted a criminal trial given the anger and grief"
over the accident, Ruiko Muto, a campaigner who called for charges,
told reporters.

"We feel a sense of achievement that a criminal case will be held to
account for an accident that caused such tremendous damage."

The judicial panel is composed of ordinary citizens.

A parliamentary report has said Fukushima was a man-made disaster
caused by Japan's culture of "reflexive obedience", but no one has
been punished criminally.

An angry public has increasingly pointed to cosy ties among the
government, regulators and nuclear operators that have allegedly
insulated executives of the plant operator Tokyo Electric Power
(TEPCO) from being charged.

Although the March 11 earthquake and tsunami killed 18,000 people, the
nuclear disaster it caused is not officially recorded as having
directly killed anyone.

The most lasting health impact of the Fukushima nuclear disaster will
likely be psychological not physical, according to a trio of studies
published today in The Lancet.

The judicial review panel issued the same ruling in July last year,
hailed by thousands of plaintiffs who demanded charges be laid, but
the prosecutors gave up charging the former executives in January
after re-opening their investigation into the case.

Campaigners have called for about three dozen company officials to be
held accountable for their failure to take proper measures to protect
the site against the tsunami, which sparked the worst atomic crisis in
a generation.

 Story First Published: July 31, 2015 14:57 IST

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