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Fallout legacy – Fukushima nuclear disaster survivors mark 15th anniversary amid struggle to rebuild devastated region

Ella Chan by Ella Chan
March 13, 2026
in World
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Fallout legacy – Fukushima nuclear disaster survivors mark 15th anniversary amid struggle to rebuild devastated region
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Article by Viory

Survivors of the 2011 Fukushima disaster reflected on efforts to revive the area devastated by the 9.0‑magnitude Tohoku earthquake and tsunami, which led to the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear tragedy.

Footage filmed on Friday shows remnants of the affected area sealed behind fences, alongside exhibits inside the Great East Japan Earthquake and Nuclear Disaster Memorial Museum.

Survivors and museum staff recounted the disaster’s heavy toll on the region and outlined ongoing projects to breathe new life into the area as a tribute to those who lost their lives.

“Almost none of the houses in our district were left. When someone was missing and hadn’t made it to the evacuation point just two kilometres away, everyone in the community understood that they had been swept away by the waves,” shared Isuke Takakura, a disaster survivor.

“After the evacuation order was lifted, many people felt anger, regret and deep sadness. But if we didn’t move forward, this place would remain a barren land. So we decided to do what we could while we are still alive,” he continued.

Museum staff member Sumie Takeda said the number of residents in the area has steadily declined in the years since the disaster.

“Children from this community will never be able to build homes where their families once lived, so only a small number of people have returned […] it is important that these stories continue to be shared, and we hope this place can keep telling them,” she underlined.

On March 11, 2011, a magnitude 9.0 earthquake and tsunami struck eastern Japan, causing unprecedented devastation and triggering the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster. Some 18,000 people were killed or went missing, the plant’s power systems failed, and insufficient cooling led to reactor meltdowns and radioactive releases into the environment.

After the 2011 meltdowns, large amounts of radioactive material, including Caesium-137, were released into the environment. While much of the fallout drifted into the Pacific Ocean, significant contamination settled across Fukushima Prefecture, forcing authorities to establish vast exclusion zones that many residents are still unable to return to more than a decade later.

While only a limited number of deaths or life‑threatening illnesses have been directly linked to radiation, more than 2,200 people died in connection with evacuation measures, on top of the roughly 19,500 fatalities from the quake and tsunami themselves.

Article by Viory

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