Returning to Fukushima after the disaster (2016) | Foreign Correspondent
Mark Willacy travels to radiation-poisoned Fukushima to uncover startling new evidence about the dangers that still lurk there and the near insurmountable task of cleaning it up. It’s like a postcard of rural Japan... lush forests, waterfalls and bubbling streams; quaint villages where pink cherry blossoms festoon the streets. But there’s a grotesqueness here. Houses which rang with the sounds of life and laughter are being swallowed by weeds and vines; inside they are choked by cobwebs and dust. This is the countryside of Fukushima. Five years after the nuclear meltdown, it remains full of radiation, and virtually empty of people. In the beginning I felt extremely lonely. But now I’m used to it – Naoto Matsumura, A farmer who stayed put to care for abandoned animals – and who is described as Japan’s most contaminated person. In contrast the stricken Fukushima plant is thronging with activity. About 6500 courageous workers toil to contain the radiation but, as former Japan Correspondent Mark Willacy reports, it could scarcely be said that they are winning. Willacy was one of the first journalists on the scene after the double headed tsunami and nuclear disaster in 2011, and has reported on it extensively since. Now he has been invited on a tour of the plant courtesy of the operator TEPCO. What Willacy discovers is truly unsettling. The task of neutralising and retrieving hundreds of tonnes of melted nuclear fuel turns out to be far greater than previously thought. So too might be the eventual cost, as well as the time that will be required to remedy the site –that is, if it can ever be fully remedied. There’s no playbook – they’re making it up as they go along – former US chief nuclear watchdog Gregory Jaczko Mark Willacy interviews Naoto Kan, Japan’s Prime Minister at the time of the crisis. He is a convert to the anti-nuclear cause and – along with Gregory Jaczko - a sceptic about whether the clean-up will succeed. There was a risk that half or all of Japan could have been destroyed. So in a way the accident took us to the brink of destruction – Naoto Kan About Foreign Correspondent: Foreign Correspondent is the prime-time international public affairs program on Australia's national broadcaster, ABC-TV. We produce half-hour duration in-depth reports for broadcast across the ABC's television channels and digital platforms. Since 1992, our teams have journeyed to more than 170 countries to report on war, natural calamity and social and political upheaval – through the eyes of the people at the heart of it all. Contributions may be removed if they violate ABC’s Online Terms of Use http://www.abc.net.au/conditions.htm (Section 3). This is an official Australian Broadcasting Corporation YouTube channel.

How has the Chernobyl disaster changed lives? | Foreign Correspondent

Inside Japan's Nuclear Meltdown (full documentary) | FRONTLINE

Japan's Great Wall: Can It Stop A Tsunami? | Foreign Correspondent

The Next Stage of Decommissioning -Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station Today-

Expert says 2020 Tokyo Olympics unsafe due to Fukushima | 60 Minutes

The Fukushima Nuclear Reactor Accident: What Happened and What Does It Mean?

This Concrete Dome Holds A Leaking Toxic Timebomb | Foreign Correspondent

From City to Jungle, Indonesia’s grand plan to move its Capital | Foreign Correspondent

Fukushima - After The Disaster

Fukushima: The nuclear disaster that shook the world - BBC News

Lessons from the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and TsunamiーNHK WORLD-JAPAN NEWS

Chernobyl; Fukushima; The Spill at Dan River | 60 Minutes Full Episodes

10 Prehistoric Structures That Shouldn't Exist

What Happened at Chernobyl: 40 years on - BBC World Service Documentaries

Ground zero at Fukushima nuclear power plant | 60 Minutes Australia

The Fukushima Daiichi Disaster 2011 | Plainly Difficult Documentary

The 2011 Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami | 60 Minutes Full Episodes

Inside Mexico's Most Powerful Drug Cartel | Foreign Correspondent

The story of Chernobyl's New Safe Confinement

