DADENA BEACH, Florida: For Hendrick Motorsports' 40th anniversary, team owner Rick Hendrick had even more reason to rejoice thanks to William Byron. Lap 197 of the Daytona 500 saw a chaotic restart, and just minutes before Ross Chastain spun crazily through the infield grass off Austin Cindric's Ford's bumper, NASCAR called the fifth caution of the race. Byron arrived at the start/finish line and took the white flag. In the period of caution, Alex Bowman finished just behind his teammate, giving Hendrick a 1-2 finish and the organization's first win in the "Great American Race" since Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s victory in 2014. In the "Great American Race," it was the first Hendrick 1-2 since Jimmie Johnson defeated Earnhardt to the finish line in 2013. With this victory, Hendrick tied Petty Enterprises for the most in the history of the most prestigious race in the NASCAR Cup Series. It was also Hendrick's eighth Daytona 500 triumph. The weekend...
TOKYO (AP) — A Japanese court ruled Thursday that three
former executives of Tokyo Electric Power Company were not guilty of
professional negligence in the 2011 disaster at the Fukushima nuclear power
plant because ensuring absolute safety at nuclear plants was not a government
requirement at that time.
The ruling by the Tokyo District Court ended the only
criminal trial related to the nuclear accident that has kept tens of thousands
of residents away from their homes because of lingering radiation
contamination.
Lawyers representing the 5,700 Fukushima residents who filed
the criminal complaint said they will push prosecutors to appeal the decision.
A group of supporters stood outside the court Thursday with placards reading
“Unjust ruling.”
The court said ex-TEPCO Chairman Tsunehisa Katsumata, 79, and
two other former executives were also not guilty of causing the deaths of 44
elderly patients whose health deteriorated during or after forced evacuations
from a local hospital and a nursing home.
The executives were accused of failing to anticipate the
massive tsunami that struck the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant on March 11,
2011, following a magnitude 9 earthquake, and of failing to take measures that
might have protected the plant.
Katsumata and co-defendants Sakae Muto, 69, and Ichiro
Takekuro, 73, pleaded not guilty at the trial’s opening session in June 2017.
They said predicting the tsunami was impossible.
Three of the plant’s reactors had meltdowns, spreading
radiation into surrounding communities and into the sea.
Prosecutors in December requested five-year prison sentences
for each executive, accusing them of not doing enough to guard against the
threat of a large tsunami despite knowing the risk.
In its ruling, the court said the defendants held responsible
positions at TEPCO, but that did not necessarily mean they were responsible for
taking measures beyond those in the legal regulatory framework.
It said there is no proof they could have foreseen that a
tsunami could flood the plant the way it did in 2011.
TEPCO officials were aware of a need to improve tsunami
prevention measures and were considering taking steps by 2008 and 2009, but
those steps were in line with government safety standards at the time.
The prosecutors argued that TEPCO could have prevented the
disaster had it halted the plant to install safety measures before the tsunami.
But the court said the company’s responsibility to supply electricity to the
public meant that idling the plant would have had a “social impact,” and that
possible measures were likely not ready in time.
The acquittal disappointed dozens of Fukushima residents and
their supporters who attended the ruling.
“Who is going to take responsibility then? It was TEPCO that
caused the accident, there is no mistake about it,” said Masakatsu Kanno, a
Fukushima resident whose father died after being evacuated from a hospital.
Hiroyuki Kawai, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, said the
decision must be appealed.
“The ruling showed that the judge did not understand the
dangers of nuclear plants at all, and it was sympathetic to the company
executives and their management decisions,” Kawai said. “The ruling sounded as
if it was written by supporters of nuclear energy.”
Prosecutors had told the court that the three defendants had
access to data and scientific studies that anticipated the possibility of a
tsunami exceeding 10 meters (33 feet) which could trigger a loss of power and a
severe accident.
Defense attorneys told the court that the tsunami prediction
was not well established. They said the actual damage was larger than
projected, and that if TEPCO had taken steps based on the projection, it would
not have prevented the disaster.
TEPCO declined to comment directly on the ruling but pledged
to devote itself to the compensation of disaster-hit people and the cleanup of
the plant and its surroundings while enhancing the safety of nuclear plants
“with unwavering determination.”
Katsumata apologized “to the people for causing tremendous
trouble” in a statement released by his lawyer.
More than eight years since the disaster, the Fukushima plant
has been stabilized and being decommissioned — a decades-long process that is
still at an early stage. TEPCO is struggling with massive amounts of treated
but still radioactive water that is stored in 1,000 tanks on the compound,
hampering the cleanup work.
Prosecutors said TEPCO was conducting a tsunami safety review
following a 2007 earthquake in Niigata in northern Japan that damaged another
TEPCO plant, and the three former executives routinely participated in that
process. In March 2008, a TEPCO subsidiary projected that a tsunami as high as
15.7 meters (47 feet) could hit Fukushima, prompting the company to consider
building seawalls, but the executives allegedly delayed the idea to avoid
additional spending.
Prosecutors presented hundreds of pieces of evidence
including emails between safety officials and the two vice presidents that
suggested increasing concern and a need for more tsunami defenses at the plant.
More than 20 TEPCO officials and scientists testified in court.
Government and parliamentary investigations said TEPCO’s lack
of a safety culture and weak risk management, including an underestimation of
tsunami risks, led to the disaster. They said TEPCO colluded with regulators to
disregard tsunami protection measures
The company has said it could have been more proactive with
safety measures, but that it could not anticipate the massive tsunami that
crippled the plant.
TEPCO has spent 9 trillion yen ($83 billion) on compensation
related to the disaster. It needs to spend an estimated 8 trillion yen ($74
billion) to decommission the plant and 6 trillion yen ($55 billion) for
decontamination.
Comments
Post a Comment