Record radiation found off 
 Japan 23 Aug 2012 Record levels of 
radioactive caesium were detected in fish caught within 20km of Japan's damaged 
Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station, news reports said yesterday. The 
operator Tokyo Electric Power Co said Tuesday it had found 25,800 becquerels per 
kilogram of radioactive caesium in greenling, 258 times higher than the 
government safety standard. Fishing in waters off the plant has been voluntarily 
restricted since the nuclear disaster at the plant, which went into meltdown 
after the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.
Tepco Finds Extreme Levels of 
 Radioactivity in Fukushima Fish 22 
Aug 2012 Tokyo Electric Power Co. found record high levels of radioactive cesium 
in fish it caught for tests within 20 kilometers of the coast from the crippled 
Fukushima Dai-Ichi nuclear plant. The utility detected a combined 25,800 
becquerels per kilogram of cesium 134 and cesium 137 in a greenling caught on 
Aug. 1, it said 
yesterday in a statement. That beat the previous high of 18,700 becquerels per 
kilogram found in cherry salmon and is 258 times the level of cesium Japan's 
government considers safe for consumption, Kyodo News reported.
Japan nuclear protesters meet 
 premier 22 Aug 2012 For the first 
time since antinuclear rallies began months ago outside Prime Minister Yoshihiko 
Noda's office, a dozen protesters were allowed inside Wednesday for a half-hour 
meeting that the fledgling movement hailed as a victory. The meeting comes at a 
time of growing antinuclear sentiment in Japan, and with elections expected this 
year. Noda, who angered demonstrators by 
dismissing their weekly rallies as "loud noise," had been under 
public pressure to meet with them face to face. The demonstrators are calling 
for a shutdown of the reactors at the Oi nuclear power plant in western Japan - 
the first reactors to be restarted since the nuclear accident at Fukushima in 
March 2011 - and for Japan to decommission its 54 other reactors. [No, 
Noda. 'Loud noise' would have been the case if protesters stormed the 
building and opened fire. (Well, some might think: If you're gettin' 
blamed for making 'loud noise' -- you might as well make some! 
<g>) ]
Japan's PM meets leaders of anti-nuke 
 protests but rejects demand that plants stay shuttered 22 Aug 2012 Japan’s prime minister met for the first time 
with leaders of weekly anti-nuclear protests Wednesday but rejected their demand 
that two recently restarted nuclear plants should be shut again. Tens of 
thousands of people have been gathering every Friday night outside Prime 
Minister Yoshihiko Noda's office compound to protest against nuclear power 
because of safety concerns set off by last year's the ongoing Fukushima 
Dai-ichi nuclear crisis. The 11 protest leaders were allowed into the complex 
for the first time since they started chanting anti-nuclear slogans outside the 
tightly guarded building in April.
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