Archive Footage / All Star Lectures of the Symposium Day 2

Symposium: The Medical and Ecological Consequences of the Fukushima Nuclear Accident

Tuesday March 12th, 9AM~6:30PM (Day2) 

The New York Academy of Medicine, New York City, NY

A unique, two-day symposium at which an international panel of leading medical and biological scientists, nuclear engineers, and policy experts will make presentations on and discuss the bio-medical and ecological consequences of the Fukushima disaster, will be held at The New York Academy of Medicine on March 11-12, 2013, the second anniversary of the accident. The public is welcome.

A project of The Helen Caldicott Foundation, the symposium is being co-sponsored by Physicians for Social Responsibility.

“Day 2 Opening Remark by Andrew Kanter, MD, MPH”
HD, 6 min 55 sec, in English

Andrew Kanter, MD, MPH
Session Chair, Physicians for Social Responsibility

“Lessons from Chernobyl”
HD, 21 min 37 sec, in English

Dr. Alexey Yablokov
Russian Academy of Sciences

“Remark after Dr. Alexey Yablokov Lecture”
HD, 1 min 33 sec, in English

Andrew Kanter, MD, MPH
Session Chair, Physicians for Social Responsibility

“Congenital Malformations in Rivne Polossia and the Chernobyl Accident”
HD, 32 min 19 sec, in English

Dr. Wladimir Wertelecki
Former Chair of the Department of Medical Genetics and Birth Defects
University of South Alabama

“Remark after Dr. Wladimir Wertelecki Lecture”
HD, 1 min 56 sec, in English

Andrew Kanter, MD, MPH
Session Chair, Physicians for Social Responsibility

“Nuclear Disaster at Fukushima: source terms: health effects”
HD, 38 min 53 sec, in English

Dr. Ian Fairlie
Radiation Biologist and Independent Consultant

“Health Impacts of Radiation Release from Nuclear Facilities: Lessons Past and Present”
HD, 31 min 41 sec, in English

Dr. Steven Wing
Gillings School of Global Public Health
University of North Carolina

“Post Fukushima Increases in Newborn Hypothyroidism on the West Coast of USA”
HD, 16 min 38 sec, in English

Joseph Mangano
Executive Director
Radiation and Public Health Project

“Remark after Joseph Mangano Lecture and Introduction of Robert Alvalez”
HD, 1 min 24 sec, in English

Andrew Kanter, MD, MPH
Session Chair, Physicians for Social Responsibility

“Reducing the Risks of Spent Power Reactor Fuel”
HD, 30 min 14 sec, in English

Robert Alvarez
Senior Scholar, Institute for Policy Studies in Washington DC
Former Senior Policy Advisor at the U.S. Energy Department under President Clinton

“Report from Japan: Introduction”
HD, 3 min 24 sec, in English

Kazko Kawai
Voices for Lively Spring

“Report from Japan: Health Effects Seen in Children”
HD, 4 min 52 sec, in English

Yurika Hashimoto, MD
Since June 2011, Dr. Hashimoto has seen more than 500 affected children

in Fukushima and other areas in East Japan.

“Report from Japan: Overall Health Situations in Japan”
HD, 11 min 8 sec, in English

Mari Takenouchi
Journalist
Mari left Tokyo on March 15, 2011 for Okinawa. Concerned about the health situation in Japan, she sent a 56-page letter to the UN.

“Report from Japan: Debris~the World of Corruption~”
HD, 12 min 33 sec, in English

Kazko Kawai
Voices for Lively Spring
Kazko became an activist when the debris problem arose.

“Report from Japan: My Observation in Japan”
HD, 8 min 20 sec, in English

Jeffrey Patterson, DO
President / Physicians for Social Responsibility

Dr. Patterson was engaged in talks in Japan after the IPPNW world congress in Hiroshima last August, and also took part in health interviews with local families.

“Report from Japan”
HD, 1 min 34 sec, in English

Participant Comment

“Remark on Joseph Mangano Lecture”
HD, 2 min 39 sec, in English

Donald Louria, MD
Chairman Emeritus
Department of Preventive Medicine and Community Health
University of Medicine and Dentistry, New Jersey

“Post-Fukushima Food Monitoring in the US”
HD, 17 min 24 sec, in English

Cindy Folkers
Radiation and Health Specialist
Beyond Nuclear

“Gender Matters in the Atomic Age”
HD, 17 min 30 sec, in English

Mary Olson
Southeast Regional Director
Nuclear Information & Resource Service

The NIRS radiation health effects page

“Seventy Years of Radioactive Risks in Japan and America”
HD, 29 min 55 sec, in English

Kevin Kamps
Specialist in High Level Waste Management and Transportation
Beyond Nuclear

“My Experience with Nuclear Power”
HD, 24 min 47 sec, in English

David Freeman
Former Chair
Tennessee Valley Authority

Archive Footage / All Star Lectures of the Symposium Day 1

Symposium: The Medical and Ecological Consequences of the Fukushima Nuclear Accident

Monday March 11th, 9AM~6PM (Day1) Eastern Time

The New York Academy of Medicine, New York City, NY

A unique, two-day symposium at which an international panel of leading medical and biological scientists, nuclear engineers, and policy experts will make presentations on and discuss the bio-medical and ecological consequences of the Fukushima disaster, will be held at The New York Academy of Medicine on March 11-12, 2013, the second anniversary of the accident. The public is welcome.

A project of The Helen Caldicott Foundation, the symposium is being co-sponsored by Physicians for Social Responsibility.

“Opening Remark by Donald Louria, MD”
HD, 8 min 26 secs, in English

Donald Louria, MD
Chairman Emeritus
Department of Preventive Medicine and Community Health
University of Medicine and Dentistry, New Jersey

“What Did They Know and When Did They Know It?”
HD, 30 min 33 secs, in English

Arnie Gundersen
Nuclear Engineer
Fairewinds Associates

“Another Unsurprising Surprise”
HD, 18 min 16 sec, in English

David Lochbaum
Union of Concerned Scientists

“Remark after David Lochbaum Lecture”
HD, 2 min 9 sec, in English

Donald Louria, MD
Chairman Emeritus
Department of Preventive Medicine and Community Health
University of Medicine and Dentistry, New Jersey

“What Became Clear in the Diet Fukushima Investigation Committee”
HD, 25 min 34 sec, in English

Hisako Sakiyama, MD
Doctor of Medicine, Former Senior Researcher in National Institute Radiological Sciences
Member of Fukushima Nuclear Accident Independent Investigative Commission

“Remark after Hisami Sakiyama Lecture”
HD, 2 min 4 sec, in English

Donald Louria, MD
Chairman Emeritus
Department of Preventive Medicine and Community Health
University of Medicine and Dentistry, New Jersey

“What Did the World Learn from the Fukushima Accident”
HD, 22 min 29 sec, in English

Akio Matsumura
Founder of the Global Forum of Spiritual and Parliamentary Leaders

“Press Conference with US Navy Quartermasters (retired) who suffered radiation exposure and subsequent health damage while serving on the USS Ronald Reagan during a Fukushima aid and rescue mission”

HD, 27 min 8 sec, in English

Jeff Patterson, DO
Physicians for Social Responsibility
Helen Caldicott, MD
Helen Caldicott Foundation
Jaime Plym and Maurice Enis
Retired US Navy Quartermaster, USS Ronald Reagan

“The Implications of Massive Radiation Contamination of Japan with Radioactive Cesium”
HD, 21 min 10 sec, in English

Steven Starr
Senior Scientist, Physicians for Social Responsibility
Clinical Laboratory Science Program Director, University of Missouri

“Chernobyl, Fukushima, and Other Hot Places: Biological Implications”
HD, 35 min 4 sec, in English

Dr. Timothy Mousseau
Department of Biological Sciences
University of South Carolina

“Remark after Dr. Timothy Mousseau”
HD, 1 min 44 sec, in English

Helen Caldicott, MD
Founding President Physicians for Social Responsibility

“Fukushima Ocean Impacts”
HD, 35 min 4 sec, in English

Ken Buesseler
Marine Scientist
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

“Remark after Dr. Marek Niedziela Video Lecture”
HD, 6 min 32 sec, in English

Helen Caldicott, MD
Founding President Physicians for Social Responsibility

“Living with Uncertainty About Low Dose Radiation Risks”
HD, 29 min 51 sec, in English

David Brenner, PhD, DSc
Center for Radiological Research
College of Physicians and Surgeon
Columbia University

“Q & A”
HD, 29 min 51 sec, in English

Panelists:
David Brenner, PhD, DSc
Dr. Timothy Mousseau
Ken Buesseler
Steven Starr

Atomic Bomb Survivors Meet Descendants of Harry Truman and the Manhattan Project

CFF will post the archive footage in mid June!


Live Video streaming by Ustream

Please attend social streaming with us while live!

Japan Society Presents
“Atomic Bomb Survivors Meet Descendants of Harry Truman and the Manhattan Project”
May 2nd Thursday
1:30 pm – 3:00 pm

Clifton Truman Daniel, grandson of President Harry Truman, and Dr. Cynthia Miller, daughter of the Manhattan Project’s Delos Van Dine, will share personal histories with two atomic bomb survivors: Shigeko Sasamori and Jong-keun Lee. Followed by Q&A. For invited high school groups only.

Co-hosted with Youth Arts New York/Hibakusha Stories.

Please review last October’s event!

2 Video Message from Japan / Symposium Day 1

Symposium: The Medical and Ecological Consequences of the Fukushima Nuclear Accident

“My Experiences as Prime Minister during the Fukushima Nuclear Disaster”
HD, 16 min, in Japanese with English Subtitle

Naoto KAN

Member of the House of Representatives of the Japanese Diet, Former Prime Minister of Japan

“Fukushima Daiichi: A Chronological Account of the Disaster”
HD, 14 min 53 sec, in Japanese with English Subtitle

Hiroaki Koide

Master of Science in Nuclear Engineering, Assistant Professor at the Kyoto University Research Institute, Nuclear Waste Management & Safety Expert

Videographed & Edited by Intertelemedia, Inc
Translated by Kazko Kawai, Voices for Lively Spring
Subtitled by East River Films Inc

The New York Academy of Medicine, New York City, NY

Monday March 11th, 9AM~6PM (Day1) & Tuesday 12th, 9AM~6PM (Day2) Eastern Time

A unique, two-day symposium at which an international panel of leading medical and biological scientists, nuclear engineers, and policy experts will make presentations on and discuss the bio-medical and ecological consequences of the Fukushima disaster, will be held at The New York Academy of Medicine on March 11-12, 2013, the second anniversary of the accident. The public is welcome.

A project of The Helen Caldicott Foundation, the symposium is being co-sponsored by Physicians for Social Responsibility.

The Presenters:

The event will be chaired by Donald Louria, MD: Chairman Emeritus of the Department of Preventive Medicine and Community Health, University of Medicine and Dentistry, New Jersey.

Confirmed speakers include:

Dr. Tim Mousseau, Professor of Biological Sciences, University of South Carolina – Chernobyl, Fukushima and Other Hot Places, Biological Consequences

Ken Buesseler, Marine Scientist, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute –Consequences for the Ocean of the Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant Accident

David Lochbaum, The Union of Concerned Scientists – Another Unsurprising Surprise

Dr. Wladimir Wertelecki, President of the Board, OMNI-Net Ukraine Child Development Programs (current). Professor of Biomedical Anthropology (Adjunct) Graduate Program in Biomedical Anthropology, State University of New York at Binghamton, NY (2011-). Former Chair of the Department of Medical Genetics and Birth Defects, University of South Alabama, 1974-2010 – Congenital Malformations in Rivne Polossia and the Chernobyl Accident

Dr. Marek Niedziela, Professor of Pediatrics, Poznan (Poland) University of Medical Sciences – Differential diagnosis of ultrasonographic thyroid lesions in children

Dr. Alexy Yablokov, Russian Academy of Sciences – Lessons from Chernobyl

Akio Matsumura, Founder of the Global Forum of Spiritual and Parliamentary Leaders – What did the World Learn from the Fukushima Accident?

Robert Alvarez, Senior Scholar, Institute for Policy Studies, formerly of DoE – Management of Spent Fuel Pools and Radioactive Waste

Arnie Gundersen, Nuclear Engineer, Fairewinds Associates – What Did They Know and When Did They Know It?

Dr. David Brenner, Higgins Professor Radiation Biophysics, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University – Mechanistic Models for Effects of Ionizing Radiation on Living Systems

Dr. Steven Wing, Associate Professor Epidemiology, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University North Carolina – Epidemiologic studies of radiation releases from nuclear facilities: Lessons past and present.

Steven Starr, Senior Scientist, Physicians for Social Responsibility, Clinical Laboratory Science Program Director, University of Missouri – The implications of the massive contamination of Japan with radioactive cesium

David Freeman, Engineer and Attorney, Former Chairman of TVA, Office of Science and Technology in charge of energy and the environment in the Johnson White House, and for 2 years under Nixon –The Rise and Fall of Nuclear Power

Dr. Ian Fairlie, Radiation Biologist and Independent Consultant on Radiation Risks, Former Scientific Secretary to UK Government’s Committee Examining Radiation Risks from Internal Emitters – The Nuclear Disaster at Fukushima: Nuclear Source Terms, Initial Health Effects

Andrew S. Kanter, MD MPH FACMI, Immediate Past-President of Physicians for Social Responsibility – Moderator, Health Effects Panel.

Dr. Hisako Sakiyama, Doctor of Medicine, Former Senior Researcher in National Institute Radiological Sciences, Member of Fukushima Nuclear Accident Independent Investigative Commission  – Risk Assessment of Low Dose Radiation in Japan; What Became Clear to The National Diet of Japan Fukushima Nuclear Accident Independent Investigation Commission

Dr. Herbert Abrams, Stanford University, Emeritus Professor Radiology, Stanford University, Member Biological Effects of Ionizing Radiation Committee National Academy Sciences (BEIR V11)  – “The Hazards of Low-level Ionizing Radiation: Controversy and Evidence.”

Kevin Kamps, Specialist in High Level Waste Management and Transportation, Beyond Nuclear – Seventy Years of Radioactive Risks in Japan and America

Joseph Mangano, Executive Director, Radiation and Public Health Project, speaking on a new article about increases in newborn hypothyroidism.

Mary Olson, Nuclear Information and Resource Service, Southeast – Gender Matters in the Atomic Age

Cindy Folkers, Radiation and Health Specialist, Beyond Nuclear - Post-Fukushima Food Monitoring

Hiroaki Koide, Master of Nuclear Engineering, Kyoto University Research Reactor Institute (KURRI), Specialist of Radiation Safety and Control.

Dr. Helen Caldicott, Founding President Physicians for Social Responsibility – The Nuclear Age and Future Generations

Nuclear Famine: A Billion People & a Planet at Risk with Dr. Andrew Kanter, M.D., M.P.H.

HD, 39 min 32 sec, in English

LIFELINES CENTER Cogent Talk About A Complex World

Tuesday, January 8 at 7:00 p.m. in Reidy Friendship Hall

Recent scientific studies reveal that even a “limited” nuclear war would cause disastrous effects on global climate change and undoubtedly result in severe global famine. An expert in several areas, including nuclear power, nuclear waste, radiation exposure, the Iran nuclear crisis, nuclear nonproliferation and disarmament, and global warming and clean energy options, Dr. Kanter will address practical action steps to protect human beings and the planet by working steadily and assiduously toward the complete abolition of nuclear weapons.

Andrew Kanter, MD, MPH is President of the New York City Chapter and Member of the National Board of Physicians for Social Responsibility, and Assistant Professor of Clinical Biomedical Informatics and Clinical Epidemiology at Columbia University. He also currently the directs the Health Information Systems/Medical Informatics program for the Millennium Villages Project of the Earth Institute at Columbia. Dr. Kanter has been involved with Physicians for Social Responsibility since 1982 when he started a chapter at UCLA. In 1985 he was appointed as the first full-time Medical Student Liaison to the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War. He has traveled extensively around the world and has had first-hand experience of the effects of militarism on development and the environment

This program is co-sponsored by the Lifelines Center, the All Souls Peace and Justice
Task Force, and the All Souls Nuclear Disarmament Task Force

OWS Environmental Solidarity
New Manhattan Project
Abolition 2000
Shut Down Indian Point Now!
Todos Somos Japon
Eco-Logic WBAI 99.5
Coalition To Ban Depleted Uranium

Filmed & Edited by East River Films Inc
All Rights Reserved by East River Films Inc

Sharing Personal Stories: Atomic Bomb Survivors Meet Harry Truman’s Grandson

Japan Society presents

“Sharing Personal Stories: Atomic Bomb Survivors Meet Harry Truman’s Grandson”

Wednesday, October 17, 12 PM

More than 67 years have passed since President Harry S. Truman authorized the use of the atomic bomb against Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Two survivors, Ms. Setsuko Thurlow and Mr. Yasuaki Yamashita, share their reflections, remembrances and personal testimonies with Truman’s grandson, Mr. Clifton Truman Daniel and Peace Boat Executive Committee Member Mr. Akira Kawasaki. Mr. Daniel will recount his own journey toward understanding this event, including encounters with survivors during a recent trip to Hiroshima and Nagasaki, while Mr. Kawasaki will introduce the work that Peace Boat has been doing to help survivors share their stories worldwide. Middle and high school student groups are invited to hear these eyewitness accounts and reflect on the events that shape their own personal narratives.

The program is co-sponsored by Hibakusha Stories, an initiative of Youth Arts New York, and is offered in cooperation with Peace Boat. 

Mr. Robert Croonquist Opening Remark

HD, 12 min 44 sec, in English

Q & A Session with NYC High School Students

HD, 32 min 52 sec, in English

Setsuko Thurlow Testimony

HD, 13 min 5 sec, in English

ABOUT SPEAKER

Ms. Setsuko Thurlow:

As a 13-year old schoolgirl, Setsuko Thurlow found herself in close proximity to the hypocenter of the atomic blast that rocked Hiroshima.  A survivor of one of the most pivotal events in modern history, she shares her experiences in order to sensitize us to the consequences of armed conflict on civilian populations and to promote lasting peace.  She joined forces with the mayors of Toronto, Hiroshima, and Nagasaki to establish the Peace Garden in Toronto.  Over the years, she has served with a number of organizations, including Voices of Women, the Canadian Council of Churches and the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, à Canadian Pugwash Group and Toronto Hiroshima Day Coalition, continuing her journey from victim to activist.  On October 26, 2007, she received the Order of Canada Citation in Toronto, Ontario.

Yasuaki YAMASHITA Testimony

HD, 8 min 56 sec, in English

ABOUT SPEAKER

Mr. Yasuaki YAMASHITA

When the A-Bomb fell on Nagasaki, August 9, 1945, Yasuaki Yamashita was 6 years old.  An artist and ceramicist, he moved to Mexico in 1968, where he has accepted many invitations to speak about his A-Bomb experience.  These have included schools, universities, cultural centers, a committee of the Mexican Senate, and the San Diego Museum of Photographic Arts.  In 2010 he gave his testimony at a memorial ceremony organized by the Mexico City Government on the occasion of the 65th Anniversary of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki Atomic Bombs.  He feels that it is important to keep alive the memory of the suffering, devastation, and death that nuclear weapons can cause in the hope that no one will ever use them again.

Clifton Truman Daniel Testimony

HD, 5 min 48 sec, in English

ABOUT SPEAKER

Mr. Clifton Truman Daniel:

Clifton Truman Daniel is the oldest grandson of 33rd US President Harry S. Truman and the honorary chairman of the Truman Library Institute in Independence, MO.  A former journalist and public relations executive, Mr. Daniel is the author of two books on his grandparents, Growing Up With Grandfather: Memories of Harry S. Truman (Birch Lane Press, 1995) and Dear Harry, Love Bess: Bess Truman’s Letters to Harry Truman, 1919-1943 (Truman State University Press, 2011).  He is currently at work on a book on the survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

2012 Copy Rights, East River Films Inc

Archive Footage of the NYC Press Conference May 4th 2012

Japanese Nuclear Scientist and Japanese and US medical doctors to discuss current radiological health conditions and concerns in Japan after the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactor catastrophe.

7/7 Hiroaki KOIDE / Nuclear Reactor Specialist and Assistant Professor at Kyoto University Research Reactor Institute

SD, 29 min 36 sec, in Japanese with English interpretation


6/7 Dr. Junro FUSE, Internist Presentation

SD, 13 min 15 sec, in Japanese with English interpretation

5/7 Dr. Ken NAKAYAMA, Orthopedic Surgeon, Presentation

SD, 10 min 3 sec, in Japanese with English interpretation

4/7 Dr. Andy Kanter, MD, MPH, Presentation

SD, 21 min 49 sec, in English, with Japanese Interpretation


3/7 Kazko KAWAI, Founder of Voices for Lively Spring, Presentation

SD, 3 min 43 sec, in English, no Japanese interpretation

2/7 Mari INOUE, Esp., Human Rights Now, Presentation

SD, 7 min 40 sec, in English, no Japanese interpretation

1/7 Q&A

SD, 53 min 46 sec, in Japanese & English, with interpretation

*** Dr. Ken NAKAYAMA kindly offered to show his Power Point slides here.

WHAT: A press conference about the on-going, rarely publicized and still grave situation around the stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactors, featuring a nuclear scientist from Japan, and first hand medical reports of clinical and on site observations in Japan related to the Fukushima radiological contamination, with discussion of the immediate needs to protect Japanese citizens now living in contaminated areas, for better monitoring of radioactive content of food, and for the cessation of incineration and burying of radioactive tsunami rubble throughout Japan.

WHERE: Rissho Kosei-kai 320 East 39th Street, New York, NY 10016 (between First Ave. & Second Ave.)

WHEN: Friday, May 4, 2012, 10AM-11AM

WHO: Mr. Hiroaki Koide, Assistant Professor, Research Reactor Institute of Kyoto University, Japan; Dr. Junro Fuse, Internist, Japan; Dr. Ken Nakayama, Orthopedic Surgeon, Japan; Dr. Andy Kanter, MD, MPH, Physicians for Social Responsibility, USA; Kazko Kawai, Voices for Lively Spring, Japan; Mari Inoue, Human Rights Now, USA.

DETAILS: Hosted from Japan by Voices for Lively Spring, Human Rights Now, and Physicians for Social Responsibility, the best-known nuclear scientist and concerned medical doctors from Japan and USA will share their experiences and speak about the on-going nuclear crisis in Fukushima. They will discuss the under-reported health consequences after the nuclear disaster, health risks resulting from inadequate food safety standards, and the environmental dispersion of radioactive materials by government burning of radioactive disaster debris. Voices for Lively Spring, a Japanese citizens’ group, Physicians for Social Responsibility, a US and international medical NGO, and Human Rights Now, a Japanese international human rights NGO, feel that the international community is not adequately informed about the evolving “current status” and the remaining serious problems in Japan after the nuclear disaster. The nuclear scientist and medical doctors from Japan and US will be available for media interviews.

BACKGROUND: A year after the nuclear disaster in Fukushima there has not been a significant improvement in protecting the local communities in Japan from exposure to radioactivity. Radioactive materials are still being released into the environment – air, soil and ocean – from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant. Many citizens still live in areas where the radiation level is dangerously high. The Japanese government continues to keep its citizens in harms’ way by applying a 20mSv per year standard to establish evacuation zones. Citizens in the rest of Japan also remain in danger of being exposed to unsafe levels of radiation due to widespread radiological contamination from the accident, food safety standards that are not strict enough to protect children, and the Japanese government continuing to burn and bury the radioactive disaster debris in municipalities across the nation.

SPEAKERS:

Hiroaki Koide, Nuclear Reactor Specialist and Assistant Professor at Kyoto University Research Reactor Institute. After realizing in 1970 that nuclear power was extremely dangerous, Mr. Koide dedicated over 40 years of his career to educate the nuclear industry and the general public to stop nuclear reactors in Japan. After the nuclear disaster in Fukushima, he gained “rock star” status due to his tireless efforts in providing detailed analysis and honest suggestions to the Japanese community about the extent of the disaster. He will speak about the extremely dangerous conditions at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, including the concerns regarding the damaged Unit 4 irradiated fuel pool.

Dr. Junro Fuse, Internist and head of Kosugi Medical Clinic near Tokyo, Japan. In June 2011, he started to use social media as the main tool to educate the general public on risks associated with radiation exposure. He will discuss unusual medical symptoms among their patients after the nuclear accidents, issues within the Japanese medical communities to protect citizens from the disaster, health risks in association to the burning of radioactive tsunami debris and his concerns with the current food safety standards in Japan.

Dr. Ken Nakayama, Orthopedic Surgeon from Japan. Following the 3/11 earthquake, he entered the exclusion zone in Fukushima for three days as a member of the government’s Disaster Medical Assistance Team to rescue patients abandoned at a hospital. In December 2011, he spoke in a press conference in Osaka along with Dr. Fuse in opposition to the government policy for incinerating tsunami rubbles across the country.

Dr. Andy Kanter, MD, MPH, President of the Board of Directors of Physicians for Social Responsibility, has studied radioactive plume projections from nuclear reactor accident scenarios and other public health impacts of nuclear radiation dispersion. He is the director of Health Information Systems/Medical Informatics for the Millennium Villages Project for the Earth Institute at Columbia University as well as an Asst. Prof. for Clinical Biomedical Informatics and Clinical Epidemiology at Columbia University. Will speak about the need for accurate and timely information regarding exposure to radioactivity in order to protect and promote public health.

CO-SPONSORING ORGANIZATIONS:

VOICES FOR LIVELY SPRING: Founded in December 2011, Voices for Lively Spring is a Japanese advocacy group for safe environment, working to save lives of Japanese people in the post-Fukushima era. It hosts seminars by renown scientists and journalists in large cities between Tokyo and Osaka, and sends instructors to local study groups to teach a radiation protection course in Shizuoka Prefecture, which is Japan’s focal point of the radioactive debris issue at the moment.

PHYSICIANS FOR SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY: Physicians for Social Responsibility (PSR) advocates for sound public health policies regarding exposure to radioactive and other toxic materials. Fukushima presents an immediate challenge to protect those individuals most endangered by exposure to dangerous levels of radioactivity, and to adequately and openly track the health consequences of the ongoing irradiation of populations. PSR was founded in 1961 and succeeded in achieving the Limited Nuclear Test Ban Treaty that ended the global radioactive contamination produced by atmospheric nuclear bomb testing. PSR shared in the 1985 Nobel Peace Prize awarded to International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW), for building public pressure to push their governments to end the nuclear arms race.

HUMAN RIGHTS NOW: Human Rights Now (HRN) is an international NGO based in Tokyo with more than 700 members, composed of lawyers, scholars and journalists. HRN dedicates itself to the protection and promotion of human rights. To raise awareness of the situation in Fukushima after the nuclear accident, HRN organized a human rights forum in March 2012 at the UN Church Center in conjunction with the 56th United Nations Commission on the Status of Women. Mothers and children who were evacuated from Fukushima spoke about the great and ongoing disruption of their lives. Our goal is to inform the international community about the ongoing crisis and advocate for the protection of communities in Japan.

2012 Copy Rights, Voices for Lively Springs, East River Films Inc

Professor Yury Bandazhevsky Lecture in Japan

Professor Yury Bandazhevsky Lecture in Japan

March 19th , 2012

In Russian(Belarusian?)with Japanese Translation (No English Subtitle)

44 min 30 sec

Sponsored by Radiation Defense Project

*** In this Swiss TV program made in 2004, his scientific work is introduced as well as his arrest in Belarus with English subtitles. He appears around 20 min.

Nuclear Controversies“ directed by Wlandimir Tchertkoff

51min, 2004, in French & Russian with English Subtitle

Dr. Yury Bandazhevsky, former director of the Medical Institute in Gomel (Belarus), is a scientist working on sanitary consequences of the Chernobyl disaster. He was the first to create an institute in Belarus, in 1989, specially dedicated to scientific work on the 1986 Chernobyl disaster.

On June 2001, Yury Bandazhevsky was sentenced to eight years imprisonment on the grounds that he had received bribes from students’ parents. The institute’s Deputy Director, Vladimir Ravkov, also received an eight-year prison sentence. Bandazhevsky’s lawyer claimed that he had been convicted on the basis of two testimonies made under duress, without any material evidence. According to many human rights groups Dr. Bandazhevsky was a prisoner of conscience. Amnesty International has stated on their website “His conviction was widely believed to be related to his scientific research into the Chernobyl catastrophe and his open criticism of the official response to the Chernobyl nuclear reactor disaster on people living in the region of Gomel.” His arrest came soon after he published reports critical of the official research being conducted into the Chernobyl incident.

Chronic Cs-137 incorporation in children’s organs/ Syndrome of long-living incorporated radioisotopes(SLIR):

Caesium-137 levels in organs were examined at autopsy. The highest accumulation of Cs-137 was found in the endocrine glands, in particular the thyroid, the adrenals and the pancreas. High levels were also found in the heart, the thymus and the spleen.

Photograph1: Histological myocardium composition of a 43-year-old Dobrush resident (sudden death case). Radiocesium concentration in heart – 45,4 Bq/kg

Photograph2: Histology of normal cardiac muscles and Purkinje fibers as reference

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