Radioactive wild boars invade Japanese towns

Mark Ross
By Mark Ross
March 9, 2017World News
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Towns set to reopen six years after the Fukushima nuclear crisis hire hunters to kill wild boars seen roaming vacant neighborhoods, having moved in after residents fled.

The ongoing scourge of Japan’s Fukushima meltdown—radiation—is now roaming the disaster-hit area on four legs.

Hundreds of radioactive wild boars moved into towns deserted after the nuclear crisis.

Now they scour the empty streets and overgrown backyards of the Namie town for food, an unexpected nuisance for those returning home six years after the meltdown.

Namie and another town, Tomioka, both located within the 20-kilometer exclusion zone around the Fukushima plant, are both set to partly reopen for nuclear refugees towards the end of the month.

But their homes are not safe yet—these boars have been known to attack people.

Local authorities are hiring teams of hunters to clear out the uninvited guests.

They say since last April they’ve caught 300 animals just in Tomioka.

The boars have been destroying local farms and eating plants contaminated with radiation.

Boars tested by the government showed levels of radioactive material 130 times above Japan’s safety standards.

Five towns in Fukushima have partially reopened since the disaster so far.

But three weeks before the evacuation order is to be lifted here in Tomioka, the average radiation level is still well above Japan’s goal.

Homes are still damaged or abandoned, and the streets are littered with bags of radioactive waste.

(Reuters)

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