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Post-tsunami deaths outnumber disaster toll in Fukushima

In Fukushima prefecture, 1,656 people have died from illnesses related to the disaster, compared with 1,607 who were killed in the tsunami

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Almost three years after the tsunami, many people in Japan remain in temporary housing complexes. Photo: EPA

Health complications stemming from Japan’s 2011 tsunami have killed more people in one Japanese region than the disaster itself, the local authority said on Thursday.

The biggest problem is the fact that people have been living in temporary conditions for so long
Hiroyuki Harada

Data compiled by officials and police show that almost three years after the huge waves smashed ashore, 1,656 people living in Fukushima prefecture have died from stress and other illnesses related to the disaster, compared with 1,607 who were killed in the initial calamity.

“The biggest problem is the fact that people have been living in temporary conditions for so long,” Hiroyuki Harada, a Fukushima official dealing with victim assistance, said.

“People have gone through dramatic changes of their environment. As a result, people who would not have died are dying,” he said.

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Along with the prefectures of Miyagi and Iwate, Fukushima was one of the worst hit parts of Japan when a huge 9.0 undersea earthquake sent a wall of water barrelling into the coast.

The waves swept more than 18,000 people to their deaths across the country, and destroyed entire communities.

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Fukushima was also hit with the resulting nuclear disaster after cooling systems at the Daiichi nuclear plant were knocked out, sending reactors into meltdown and forcing the evacuation of tens of thousands of people.

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