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Japan mourns 10th anniversary of 2011 quake, tsunami, nuclear disaster

Searches for those still missing after March 11 tragedies still ongoing, remembrances to be held today

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 11 Mar 2021 9:05AM

Japan mourns 10th anniversary of 2011 quake, tsunami, nuclear disaster
People offering prayers to earthquake and tsunami victims at sunrise on the shores of Arahama district in Sendai today, on the 10th anniversary of the 9.0-magnitude earthquake that triggered a tsunami and nuclear disaster, killing over 18,000 people. – AFP pic, March 11, 2021

HISANOHAMA – Japan on Thursday marks 10 years since the worst natural disaster in the country’s living memory: a powerful earthquake, deadly tsunami and nuclear meltdown that traumatised a nation.

Around 18,500 people were killed or left missing in the disaster, most of them claimed by towering waves that swept across swathes of the northeast coast after one of the strongest quakes ever recorded.

The ensuing nuclear meltdown at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant blanketed nearby areas with radiation, rendering some towns uninhabitable for years and displacing tens of thousands of residents.

The day will be full of private and public ceremonies, with a minute’s silence marked nationwide at 2:46pm local time, the precise moment a 9.0-magnitude quake struck on March 11, 2011, triggering the disaster.

Yesterday and today, there were searches in Miyagi and Fukushima regions for those still missing, as loved ones refuse to relinquish hope of finding them even a decade on.

The chances of success may appear slim, but just last week the remains of a woman missing since the tsunami were identified, in what her surviving son described as a chance to process his emotions and move forward.

In Tokyo, a slimmed-down ceremony observing virus rules will be held at the national theatre, with speeches delivered by Emperor Naruhito and Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga.

Tokyo and surrounding areas are currently under a virus state of emergency, so the audience invited to the event will be smaller than usual.

The virus will also affect events elsewhere, including an annual prayer gathering held on top of the imposing sea walls in the town of Taro in Iwate.

Participants usually hold hands as they pray for those lost in the tsunami, but this year they will observe social distancing as they remember the dead.

‘People died before my eyes’

The anniversary is being marked just two weeks before the Olympic torch relay kicks off in Fukushima prefecture, nodding to efforts to cast the event as the ‘Reconstruction Games’.

The pandemic has cast a long shadow over the Olympics, forcing its unprecedented year-long postponement, but the government and organisers are hoping the relay will bring the spotlight back to the region.

Nayuta Ganbe in Miyagi’s Sendai city speaks regularly at events about disaster prevention, sharing his experience of the tsunami, but he usually marks the anniversary privately.

“I had never wanted to think about the disaster, not on March 11,” the 21-year-old told AFP recently.

“It’s the day I lost my classmates. People died before my eyes. March 11 is a day that I hoped would never come again, so it always pains me when March 11 comes around every year,” he said.

But this year, he has decided to participate in an event on the anniversary, hoping it will help him with the ongoing work of processing the trauma he experienced.

“I am hoping that I will be able to face the disaster with a new perspective exactly 10 years on.”

For many, the anniversary will be a moment for private reflection on a tragedy that continues to reverberate, with tens of thousands of people who evacuated fearing radiation still displaced and around 2% of Fukushima still off-limits.

Reverend Akira Sato, who ministered at several churches that remain in no-go areas around the Fukushima plant, plans to visit one of the abandoned churches and reflect.

“Together with my wife, I will silently think back over the days of the disaster and offer a prayer,” he told AFP earlier this month. – AFP, March 11, 2021

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