Nation take to
streets against nuclear power
LOUD AND CLEAR: Citing the highest crowd figures
in the history of the nation’s anti-nuclear movement, organizers said the events
showed people’s concern
By Lee I-chia, Loa Iok-sin and Alison Hsiao / Staff reporters
Tens of thousands of anti-nuclear
activists take part in a protest in Taipei yesterday.
Photo: Reuters
Aborigines from Lanyu, or Orchid
Island, walk at the head of yesterday’s demonstration in Taipei City against
nuclear power and the continued construction of the Fourth Nuclear Power Plant
in Gongliao District, New Taipei City.
Photo: Wu Liang-yi, Taipei Times
“Halt construction of the Fourth Nuclear
Power Plant, put an end to nuclear power,” massed crowds shouted as tens of
thousands of people marched through the streets of Taipei City yesterday
afternoon. Protests also took place in Greater Taichung, Greater Kaohsiung and
Taitung City as people called for the government to phase out the use of nuclear
power.
The Taipei demonstration was initiated by an alliance of over 150 civic groups
that support the goal of achieving a nuclear-free homeland. The main demands of
the demonstration included halting additional budget allocation for the
yet-to-be-completed Fourth Nuclear Power Plant in New Taipei City’s (新北市)
Gongliao District (貢寮), ceasing the installation of fuel rods at the plant,
retiring the nation’s three operational nuclear power plants, removing nuclear
waste from Orchid Island (蘭嶼) and reviewing nuclear waste treatment solutions.
Demonstrators also called for zero growth in the nation’s electricity
consumption.
Most of the participants at yesterday’s march took to the streets on their own
initiative as the event’s organizers did not want mobilized crowds or the
interference of political parties, said Humanistic Education Foundation
executive director Joanna Feng (馮喬蘭), one of the groups in the alliance.
In Tapei, the march, bustling with noise and excitement, was conducted in a
festive and easygoing atmosphere with many young people dressed up in bright
colors yellow anti-nuclear stickers plastered to their faces and clothing.
Performing artists danced to music while many parents brought their children,
while a number of pet owners were seen walking dogs decked out with anti-nuclear
banners.
Wearing a gas mask, a man surnamed Hsu (許) from Taoyuan County’s Jhongli (中壢)
said he heard experts say it took a long time for residents to evacuate after
Japan’s Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear disaster.
“I am concerned that Taiwan is too small to have enough safe places to evacuate
to should a nuclear disaster occur,” he said. “Even a gas mask cannot save you
if a nuclear disaster happens in Taiwan.”
At one stop on the route of the march, the organizers set up a paper money
burner — traditionally used for burning paper money as offerings to deities or
the deceased during religious rituals — so that people could burn fake banknotes
in front of the National Treasury, mocking the Fourth Nuclear Power Plant as a
“money burner.”
“This money burner represents the Fourth Nuclear Power Plant, because during two
decades of construction, the budget for it continues to grow, but it remains
unfinished with many defects and problems,” said Lee Cho-han (李卓翰), executive
director of the alliance. “Let’s all put an end to this money burner.”
In front of the Council of Agriculture building, the Taiwan Rural Front
explained to demonstrators how much damage a nuclear disaster could bring to the
agricultural sector.
“I traveled to [Japan’s] Fukushima Prefecture last September and spoke with
farmers, many of whom are now unemployed because their farms have been
contaminated and can no longer be used to grow anything,” said Hsu Chao-wei
(徐肇尉), a member of the rural group.
“Even for those whose farms are still viable, it’s still very difficult for them
to sell what they grow because everyone is worried that their products may be
contaminated and they always have to go through strict inspections and tests
before making it onto the market,” Hsu added.
Hsu said that having suffered a nuclear disaster, the Fukushima farmers asked
him to bring back a message to Taiwanese. “They wanted me to warn everyone in
Taiwan about the dangers of nuclear power and wanted the public in Taiwan to
work hard to push for abolishing nuclear power,” Hsu said.
Meanwhile, the Humanistic Education Foundation set up portraits of lawmakers who
voted to approve additional budget for the Fourth Nuclear Power Plant and asked
demonstrators to place recall ballots into boxes.
“We will deliver the ballots to the lawmakers’ offices to tell them that we are
serious about launching a recall campaign if they do not take back their support
for nuclear energy,” a host at one the booths said.
At a crossroad on Zhonghua Road (中華路) near Ximending (西門町), an area often
crowded with young people on weekends, members of the Wild at Heart Legal
Defense Association gave short lectures on information related to nuclear
disasters as crowds passed.
“Here, where you are standing, we are only 28.2km, 25.6km and 41.9km away from
the nation’s three operational power plants, so we are actually very close to
them,” said Lu Shih-wei (陸詩薇), an attorney from the alliance.
At another stop on the march, a young woman stood on a stool holding pictures of
child victims of the Chernobyl, Ukraine, nuclear disaster. Born in 1986, the
year of the Chernobyl disaster, she said it was her destiny to be campaign
against nuclear power.
Marchers could also sign postcards demanding: “people’s freedom from the fear of
consuming radiation-contaminated food,” which were designed to be sent to the
Department of Health (DOH).
The Homemakers United Foundation and the Raging Citizens Act Now also cordoned
off an area with yellow warning tape and attached pictures of
radiation-contaminated food to it. There were also placards detailing how human
organs might be affected by nuclear radiation.
A special event was staged at 4pm when more than 300 volunteers stretched a 5km
long yellow warning tape across an area surrounding the Presidential Office,
symbolizing that everyone in the area would be forced to evacuate if a nuclear
disaster occured.
While police estimates of crowd sizes were not immediately available, the
event’s organizers said they estimated that 200,000 people took part in
nationwide demonstrations — with about 100,000 participants in Taipei, 70,000 in
Greater Kaohsiung and unspecified numbers in Greater Taichung and Taitung City —
hailing them the biggest crowd numbers in the history of anti-nuclear
demonstrations in the country.
An evening rally began at 6:30pm on Ketagalan Boulevard in front of the
Presidential Office that included lectures and performances by Taiwanese bands
and artists.
The rally went on into the night with broadcasts of anti-nuclear films, talks by
film directors, short plays by performance artists as well as unplugged musical
performances.
The Taipei demonstration was slated to end this morning with an anti-nuclear
flag ceremony at 8am.
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