The First Photojournalist in Fukushima’s Power Plant

Photojournalist Kazuma Obara has taken some of the first pictures of the inside of the Fukushima Power Plant and the daily lives of the people who work there.

Gemma O'Donoghue
Published on August 31, 2011
Updated on December 08, 2014

The 11th of March 2011 will be a date long remembered as one of Japan's darkest, when an 9.0 magnitude earthquake and a 40-metre high tsunami took the lives of over 20,000 people and destroyed the homes, communities and livelihoods of countless others. To add insult to injury, it will also be remembered as the day the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant was seriously damaged, the disastrous consequences of which may linger for years and years to come.

In the weeks and months since the natural disaster, the affected towns and communities have slowly and painstakingly began the task of rebuiling their lives, homes and communities. And whilst it is unlikely that the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant will ever open again, its workers and engineers have begun tackling the daunting question of how to clean it up, stabilise the reactors and lower dangerously high levels of radiation.

In an unauthorised visit, and at great personal risk, Kazuma Obara became the first photojournalist to enter into the nuclear plant in an attempt to draw attention to the daily life and conditions of the people who work there, with no guarantee of their health and safety. So far, the clean up project at the power station has been characterised by secrecy, misinformation and confusion, not only for the general public, but, as Obara's story tells, for the plant's workers also.

Obara's images are sobering, mundane and surreal. And have provided the world with its first images of the day to day reality of the aftermath of the world's bigget nuclear disaster since Chernobyl.

Published on August 31, 2011 by Gemma O'Donoghue
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