YAMAGATA, Japan — Another fire broke out at a nuclear reactor early Wednesday morning in Japan. It is the latest setback in a series of disasters that have stricken the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant.
Large amounts of radiation leaked into the air after a third reactor exploded and a fourth caught fire the day before, deepening the country's crisis in the wake of a huge earthquake and deadly tsumami.
Late Tuesday, the government said radiation levels had fallen again, somewhat quelling fears. It remains unclear if the new blaze will cause more radiation to spread.
Prime Minister Naoto Kan earlier said that radiation was spreading from four reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant, 150 miles north of Tokyo. A 15-mile exclusion zone was enforced around the plant as engineers battled to bring overheating reactors under control.
"The level seems very high, and there is still a very high risk of more radiation coming out," Kan said in a nationally televised statement, according to The Associated Press. "We are making utmost efforts to prevent further explosions and radiation leaks."
Meanwhile, continuing aftershocks, some of which have registered as high as 6.0-magnitude, have kept the Japanese on edge.
“I’m really scared. The earthquake on Friday really shook everything here, and nobody knows what’s going to happen at Fukushima,” said a young man working in a clothes shop in Yamagata City, which is in Yamagata Prefecture, one of the worst-hit areas.
“The aftershocks just keep coming. I’ve had enough,” he said.
Yamagata City is located just over the mountains from Sendai, which is in Miyagi Prefecture in northeastern Japan. Sendai was the largest city near the quake's epicenter.
A shell-shocked population becomes more skittish with every tremor, persistent rumbling that would, under normal circumstances, barely register with the northeast's quake-hardened people.
A restaurant in the center of Yamagata city was empty save for two customers today. The waitress said people were scared to leave their homes because of the quake and the fear of radiation, which has been detected as far away as Vladivostock in Russia.
In Yamagata, a sports center is being prepared for evacuees from around the Fukushima plant, even as snow fell heavily Tuesday evening and the city prepared for power outages that authorities said would begin Wednesday.
Despite the difficult situation, however, people here have remained civil.
At long lines for rationed gasoline and limited foodstuffs across the region, there was no jostling for better positions and no arguments.
At a small family-run hotel in the port town of Hitachi, its harbor destroyed, refugees from the devastated areas to the north arrived late into the night Tuesday.
Weary customers who would have likely paid any price for a dry place to lay their head, were given discounts for the lack of running water and the owner's apologized profusely for the lack of running water.
Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) said it had safely disabled the four reactors in Fukushima, though problems of overheating remain.
The announcement, however, failed to calm fears here. As most here are aware, TEPCO has a history of coverups, including an episode after a quake near the world’s largest power plant, Kashiwazaki-Kariwa, in 2007. After disaster was averted there, the company faced criticism for building a nuclear facility almost directly over a fault line, and then deliberately played-down the severity of the situation when it was damaged.
Japanese authorities told people living within 20 miles of the FukuShima plant to stay indoors with windows closed and air conditioners off. A senior Japanese official warned that the radiation levels were now high enough to pose a medical risk.
"Now we are talking about levels that can impact human health," Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano said, according to reports.
The plant's operator, Tokyo Electric Power, told the BBC that radiation levels around Fukushima for one hour's exposure rose to eight times the legal limit for exposure in a year.
Read this GlobalPost interview with nuclear expert Arnold Gundersen on the health risks in Japan.
A statement posted on Facebook by the commander of U.S. Naval forces in Japan said that instruments on the USS George Washington, which is docked for maintenance in Yokusuka, south of Tokyo, were picking up low levels of radiation. The statement advised Navy personnel to limit outdoor activities and secure ventilation systems.
The latest explosion was thought to be at the No. 2 reactor of the plant, and the fire at the No. 4 reactor, which had been not operational but was storing spent nuclear fuel. The fourth reactor was thought to have caused the increased radiation because of the hydrogen release that caused the fire.
Edano said the fourth reactor “did not pose an imminent threat.”
AP quoted a government official saying that waste water in a storage pool for one of the damaged reactors may be boiling. He said technicians were trying to solve the problem, but did not expand on what additional risks this poses.
Most of the 800 workers at the plant were evacuated due to fears of exposure to high levels of radiation, but about 50 stayed behind to pump seawater into the three reactors that experienced explosions to cool them.
The explosions have already injured 15 people who work at the plant and exposed up to 190 to higher radiation.
All of the explosions have happened after cooling system breakdowns at the reactors, BBC reports. To prevent complete meltdowns, engineers are trying to flood the chambers.
Meanwhile, Japan is still struggling to cope with the mass scale of human casualties and suffering caused by the earthquake — upgraded to magnitude 9.0 by the U.S. Geological Survey — and tsunami. The official death toll has risen to 2,500, and is expected to pass 10,000.
Some areas, like the coastal town of Minami Sanriku, have been completely devastated after the tsunami flattened virtually everything in its path.
More than 500,000 remain homeless.
The disaster has left Japan's already fragile economy reeling. There has been major damage to key industries, with electronics giants Toshiba and Sony shutting down factories and automakers Nissan, Honda and Toyota halting production lines at the cost of millions of dollars a day.
And stock markets plunged in Japan and across much of the Asia-Pacific region Tuesday.
Yet, even as hopes were fading of finding thousands of people missing since the tsunami swept ashore, there were fresh stories of survival.
A 70-year-old woman was found in her home in the town of Otsuchi, Sky News reported. It said she was suffering from hypothermia, but otherwise unhurt. A man was also rescued from the town of Ishimaki. A day earlier, a four-month-old girl was pulled, uninjured, from rubble in the town of Ishinomaki.
Back in Tokyo, residents remain on edge. In this Raw Feed video, GlobalPost correspondent Michael Condon describes the grim mood tonight in Japan's largest city.
Addtional reporting by Hanna Ingber Win in Mumbai and Barry Neild in London.
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