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Workers at the Fukushima nuclear plant on June 12, 2013/AFP

World

Man who battled Fukushima disaster dies of cancer

Workers at the Fukushima nuclear plant on June 12, 2013/AFP

Workers at the Fukushima nuclear plant on June 12, 2013/AFP

TOKYO, July 9 – The former boss of Japan’s Fukushima nuclear plant, who stayed at his post to try to tame runaway reactors after the 2011 tsunami, died of cancer on Tuesday, the operator said.

Masao Yoshida, 58, was at the power station on March 11, 2011, when towering waves swamped cooling systems and sparked meltdowns that released plumes of radiation.

Yoshida led the subsequent effort to get the crippled complex under control, as workers battled frequent aftershocks to try to prevent the disaster worsening.

Government contingency plans revealed after the event showed how scientists feared a chain reaction if Fukushima spiralled out of control, a scenario that could have seen other nuclear plants engulfed and would have meant evacuating Tokyo.

His selfless work is contrasted in the public mind with the attitude of his employers, who seemed willing to abandon the complex and are popularly believed to have shirked their responsibility.

“He died of oesophagal cancer at 11:32 am today at a Tokyo hospital,” said a spokesman for plant operator Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO).

Yoshida left the plant soon after being suddenly hospitalised in late November 2011.

TEPCO has said his cancer was unlikely to be linked to radiation exposure in the months after the disaster.

The company has said it would take at least five years and normally 10 years to develop this particular condition if radiation exposure were to blame.

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