TOKYO: Japan’s premier at the time of the Fukushima crisis said yesterday he was suing the current prime minister for defamation over online comments about the way the emergency was handled.
With less than a week to go before upper house elections, the now-opposition figure Naoto Kan said on his official website he would be taking legal action against Shinzo Abe.
Kan’s office has said in the days immediately after a massive tsunami swamped Fukushima in March 2011, his government pressed plant operator Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO) to use seawater to cool overheating reactors and prevent a catastrophe.
TEPCO subsequently said Kan had wavered on allowing seawater to be used. Kan’s statement, posted yesterday, says Abe has repeated this claim.
“Mr. Shinzo Abe in his online newsletter ran a story entitled ‘Mr. Kan’s instructions on using seawater (to cool reactors) are made-up,’ and despite my request for a correction and apology... the story remains,” Kan said on his website.
Abe “is responsible for carrying out a fair election campaign... I strongly demand he immediately admit his misconduct, delete the story and apologise for this”, Kan said. Abe has not yet responded publicly to Kan’s renewed demand to take down the newsletter, which was published in May 2011, two months after the Fukushima disaster.
Asked why Kan moved to take the legal action now, he told reporters that it was because his repeated demands to correct the story have continued to be ignored, Jiji Press reported. “The newsletter remains posted on the Internet even after the political campaign for the upcoming elections kicked off,” Kan said. Management of the crisis at Fukushima — the world’s worst atomic disaster in a generation — has been picked over in the more than two years since the tsunami rolled ashore.
Last year, an independent panel on the Fukushima disaster said Kan played a key role in preventing the crisis worsening further. Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party is expected to win comfortably after a campaign where nuclear power as an issue has been absent. AFP