Japan in the Post–3/11 Era: The Road to Rebirth

A Land Awash in Despair

Politics Society

Kikuchi Masanori [Profile]

Four months on from March 11, journalist Kikuchi Masanori visited areas of Tōhoku devastated by the earthquake and tsunami that struck on that day. Meeting with residents and local leaders, he finds that they are desperate to bounce back from the tragedy and rebuild their lives.

This is my third visit to the Tōhoku region since the earthquake and tsunami, following previous trips in March, shortly after the disaster struck, and again in early June. On my second visit, I spent most of my time talking to the families and other people involved with the Ōkawa Elementary School in Ishinomaki, which became notorious nationwide for the horrendous death toll it suffered in the tsunami, when 74 of the school’s 108 students lost their lives. In this case, what happened was more than just a natural disaster. The school had no contingency plans in place for evacuation in the event of a major tsunami, and failed to issue instructions for pupils and teachers to move to safer ground during the 50 minutes or so between the earthquake and the tsunami. When the huge tsunami struck, it surpassed all expectations, and large numbers of people were killed all at once. The school stands as a chilling symbol of the unprecedented scale of the calamity.

A Pervasive Feeling of Helplessness and Resignation

As of the end of July, official statistics compiled by the National Police Agency list some 20, 600 people as either confirmed dead or still missing after the disaster. Of this total, around 9,400 are from Miyagi, the prefecture closest to the epicenter. This is more than double the number of fatalities in Iwate Prefecture, the second-worst-affected prefecture, where some 4,600 people lost their lives. Immediately after the disaster, some predictions forecast that the eventual death toll would be in excess of 30,000. It now seems likely that initial estimates were on the high side, as a result of multiple relatives and acquaintances submitting missing person notifications for the same individual.


Inside the Ōkawa Elementary School in Ishinomaki, where nearly three quarters of the children lost their lives in the disaster.

It is certainly true that things have started to move forward. As the volunteer coordinator in Onagawa tells me, the situation has improved dramatically from the conditions of chaos that prevailed in March. I am hearing many more optimistic comments from disaster victims on this visit than on my previous trips. Time and again I have been impressed by people’s determination to look on the bright side of things. “We can’t keep crying forever,” one person tells me. “Now we’ve found a place to live, we feel we can finally see the light at the end of the tunnel,” says another.

Nevertheless, more than 10,000 people in Miyagi Prefecture alone are still without permanent homes. Many—like the man I quoted at the beginning of this piece—have not even been able to get into temporary housing. Cases of suicide and attempted suicide have been on the rise, and growing numbers of people are driven to the point of despair after losing everything they had—family, property, livelihood, and employment.

Living as I do in Tokyo, I find it hard to avoid the sense that the national media has shifted its focus to the unending nuclear crisis in Fukushima and the latest speculations about the specter of radioactive fallout. In fact, even these stories have long since lost their novelty as news. But back in the disaster areas, the grim reality is that there is still no clear road map in place for moving forward to recover and rebuild from the tsunami.

What strikes me more than anything else on this third visit to a region still ravaged by the devastation of March 11 is the pervasive sense of powerlessness and resignation that seems to hang in the air everywhere I go. Here at the heart of the devastated coast, all the jingly slogans and sunny exhortations to “Keep fighting, Japan!” ring hollow, fading without a trace into the endless expanse of the midsummer skies. Now that the initial confusion has passed, people’s memories are also starting to fade. It is impossible not to be upset by the cruelty of it all.


This Onagawa apartment building bears the scars of the tsunami, which reached as high as the third floor.

It goes without saying that one of the biggest reasons for the gulf that now divides the disaster areas from the rest of the country is the disarray and bumbling incompetence of the nation’s political leadership. Prime Minister Kan Naoto announced in June that he intended to step down, but for whatever reason, he has not yet followed through. In July, the country was treated to the spectacle of Matsumoto Ryū, who was handpicked by Kan to serve as minister for reconstruction, resigning in disgrace barely a week into the job after being caught on camera subjecting the governors of Miyagi and Iwate Prefectures to a barrage of insensitive remarks. Frustration and discontent has been mounting within the ruling Democratic Party of Japan. Meanwhile, politicians in the opposition Liberal Democratic Party and New Kōmeitō have become so obsessed with the question of Kan’s resignation that their attacks on the government have been largely ineffectual.

The total cost of damage caused by the disaster is now expected to come to some ¥17 trillion. This will rise even higher once the effects of the radiation fallout from the nuclear accident in Fukushima have been factored in. There is a mountain of issues requiring an urgent government response—coming up with a budget to fund reconstruction, working to rebuild ports and harbors, relocating large numbers of displaced people, and dealing with the nuclear disaster, to name just a few. But although both the government and opposition parties have repeatedly called the situation a “national crisis,” their response has been marked by little more than petty political point-scoring.

Dysfunctional Government, Dysfunctional Diet


Azumi Nobutaka, mayor of Onagawa in Miyagi Prefecture since 2003.

Faced by the bleak reality of disaster areas still in a totally destroyed state months after the waves receded, the anger and frustration of local authorities in the affected regions is mounting. When I visit the mayor of Onagawa, Azumi Nobutaka, in July, I find him still working out of the same temporary office in the town’s elementary school where I had met him in March. Although he looks a little less tense than the last time we met, the signs of exhaustion remain etched deep into his face.

“We still don’t have an accurate idea of how many people have moved to a new location within the town. It’s only since municipal authorities have started to process emergency relief and condolence payments that we’ve finally started to get a better idea of the numbers. The situation is even harder to grasp with regard to people who have relocated out of town. A lot of people moved away without filling any kind of paperwork. Some of these people may have moved away on a temporary basis—it is hard to say for sure where we stand. It will be some time yet before a clear picture emerges of the overall housing situation.”


Large mountains of rubble continue to disfigure the landscape.

Like other affected areas, Onagawa is currently drawing up a blueprint for reconstruction. Mayor Azumi tells me that the municipal government is aiming to finalize a plan by mid-August. After this, the town is looking at a period of roughly eight years to rebuild. Azumi is eager to clarify that the town’s number-one priority is to clear away the 440,000 tons of rubble left behind by the disaster. This alone is expected to cost to some ¥15 billion—more than double the ¥6.7 billion allowed for in the town’s initial general account budget for the current fiscal year (starting April 2011). The hope is to complete about 30% of the work this year. The costs of clearing away the rubble will bring the town’s supplementary budget for costs incurred since the disaster to ¥23.2 billion. The town is doing everything it can to scrape together the funds it needs to stay afloat.

Frustration is building at a dysfunctional government and national legislature at a time when local communities in the worst-hit regions are in dire need of government assistance. Choosing his words carefully as he discusses the government he is forced to depend on for help, Azumi laments the inefficiency of the present administration. “Nothing happens in a unified way,” he says.

“The expenses involved are huge, but the reality is that we need to move forward quickly to clear away the rubble, out of town if need be. This is not something we can achieve without funding or policies from the central government, but under the present administration there is a total lack of coordinated action, and we have had no choice but to go ahead and start the process on our own.”

In particular, Azumi believes that the government needs to take positive steps to move forward with a proposal under discussion since March to designate the disaster regions a “special reconstruction zone.” The idea is to establish special administrative zones in the worst affected areas, in which government restrictions and regulations would be relaxed to encourage reconstruction projects. These would then get special treatment in terms of the budget and taxation system—an idea that Azumi believes might be effective in the face of a disaster on such an unprecedented scale. “In normal circumstances, it’s a priority of the legal system to ensure that the national law applies to all parts of the country equally. But the normal system doesn’t function properly after a disaster on this scale. Establishing special zones tailored to the various disaster areas would make it easier to formulate policies matching the reality and needs of the situation on the ground.”

The Future of Onagawa’s Fishing Industry


Roads close to the harbor are still under water.

Onagawa is located at the southern end of the Sanriku coast. Blessed with good natural harbors and excellent fishing grounds, the town has relied on coho salmon farming and oyster cultivation as the backbone of the local economy. Mayor Azumi says that rebuilding the port, where the ground level is more than a meter lower than before the disaster, is an urgent priority.

“Despite everything, this is an ideal opportunity for redevelopment. Whole areas of the shoreline were swept away—that got rid of problems with land use rights. The national government needs to take the lead in ascertaining tide levels and so on and in establishing the appropriate levels for new wharfs as quickly as possible.”

Azumi talks about the prospects for restarting the town’s fishing industry and what he hopes to see from the government in this regard. “Unfortunately, we expect around 30 to 40 percent of the fishermen currently based in the town to leave. Even before the disaster, older people made up a disproportionate percentage of the population engaged in fishing, and the tsunami decimated the number of families involved in the business. Our local fishing industry is heavily dependent on aquaculture, and this requires considerable investments in terms of facilities, equipment, and labor. Unless we work together, we will get nowhere. At the moment we have fifteen fishing areas with attached port facilities; we hope to be able to support the community by consolidating these into around six areas. We are putting up prefab ‘fishers’ stations’ in each fishing area to give people somewhere to speak frankly and exchange ideas about the future of the industry locally. This is why we need to have the area designated as a special zone—to protect the area’s unique businesses and industries for the future.”

The other major plank in Onagawa’s financial scaffolding is the subsidy it receives from the government in return for hosting the Onagawa Nuclear Power Station. The tsunami destroyed facilities belonging to the prefectural nuclear power disaster prevention center, and also came perilously close to the main reactor buildings themselves. The reactors are still shut down, and there is no knowing yet when, if ever, they will start up again. When I spoke to him in March, Azumi was eager to emphasize the differences between Onagawa and Fukushima, stressing that the nuclear power station itself withstood the earthquake as it had been designed to do. But this time he speaks slowly, choosing his words with care. “Personally, I don’t see any reason why they shouldn’t start the power station up again. But there’s no denying that the situation is tough. And again, there’s no sign of unity on the issue among the administration, the central government ministries, and the power companies. Guidelines and instructions on radiation levels and the limits of the evacuation zones have changed time and time again. Even if they do decide to abandon nuclear power, I don’t see how we can afford to just give it up overnight . . . Whatever happens, the national government needs to put a dependable long-term plan in place that will serve us for several decades to come.”

next: The Importance of Micromanagement in an Emergency

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Great East Japan Earthquake Tōhoku Kikuchi Masanori Onagawa Ishinomaki

Kikuchi MasanoriView article list

Born in Hokkaidō in 1965. Worked as a reporter at the daily Hokkaidō Shimbun before going freelance. Writes interview-based reportage and social features for such magazines as Aera, Chūō Kōron, Shinchō 45, and President.

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