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.

The Cost of Reconstruction: ¥23 Trillion over 10 Years

On my way back to Sendai from Matsushima, I stop by the wholesale fish market in Shiogama, one of the major centers of the Tōhoku seafood industry. Like so much of the region, it is also a disaster area: Twenty-one people from the town are confirmed dead or still missing after the disaster. When I visited in March, the market was practically deserted, with very little produce on sale owing to the virtual absence of any catch from any of the Miyagi Prefecture fishing ports. There is a far greater quantity and range on display this time. Local seafood retailer Suzuki Kiyotaka, age 58, also looks a lot more cheerful than when I first met him four months ago.

“Gill-net fishing started up again on a limited basis about a month ago. Since then, species like flounder—karei and hirame—have finally started to reappear. But there’s still almost nothing from the Sanriku Coast. Efforts to get the industry back on its feet aren’t going as well as people had hoped. In places like Kesennuma in Miyagi Prefecture, local residents have had to fix up the boats and harbors themselves, without any help from the central government.”


The wholesale fish market in Shiogama is starting to regain some of its former energy.


A cheerful-looking Suzuki Kiyotaka in the Shiogama fish market.

On July 29, the government’s Reconstruction Headquarters in Response to the Great East Japan Earthquake, headed by Prime Minister Kan Naoto, adopted its Basic Guidelines for Reconstruction. The preliminary estimate is that reconstruction will cost ¥23 trillion over the next 10 years. The blueprints included plans to establish special reconstruction zones with relaxed regulations, and the possibility for preferential tax treatment and the establishment of a system of government subsidies for the region. But no mention was made of relocating housing to higher ground, although this issue was surely a concern for the national government and the disaster regions. The government also failed to get agreement within the DPJ for its financial proposals, including proposed tax hikes, and the question was essentially postponed indefinitely. The outline as a whole is astonishingly thin on concrete details. Given the enthusiasm with which Prime Minister Kan initially spoke of this project, the plan that has been unveiled feels like a damp squib. It is hard to avoid the feeling that the government has ducked the challenge.

Wherever I travel in the disaster areas, I get a strong sense that people are feeling hemmed in and increasingly desperate. People are worried that the region is being left further and further behind by Tokyo. From this distance, calls to “work together as a nation to rebuild Tōhoku” quickly come to sound like an empty sloganeering. In Tōhoku, people’s lack of trust in politics and politicians is reaching breaking point.

Postcript: On September 2, a month and a half after my trip to Tōhoku, Kan and his cabinet stepped down amid mounting public criticism of the government’s performance, and Noda Yoshihiko took over as prime minister. It looks as though the new government is finally starting to move forward to the next stage in terms of addressing such issues the third supplementary budget, increasing taxes to secure the necessary public funds for reconstruction, and setting up special administrative zones. The people of Tōhoku have persevered for long enough. We must not allow them to suffer anymore.

(Originally written in Japanese. Photographs by Kuyama Shiromasa.)

Flypaper inside an evacuation center. Flies have proved a major nuisance during the hot summer months.
Flypaper inside an evacuation center. Flies have proved a major nuisance during the hot summer months.

Operated by the Self-Defense Forces, the “Kōbō no Yu” bath facilities have been a godsend for people in the evacuation centers.
Operated by the Self-Defense Forces, the “Kōbō no Yu” bath facilities have been a godsend for people in the evacuation centers.

Inside “Kōbō no Yu.”
Inside “Kōbō no Yu.”

Laundry hung out to dry next to the tennis courts.
Laundry hung out to dry next to the tennis courts.

In Onagawa port, recovery is still a long way off.
In Onagawa port, recovery is still a long way off.

In the market at Shiogama, a supply of locally caught fish and other seafood has finally started to reappear.
In the market at Shiogama, a supply of locally caught fish and other seafood has finally started to reappear.

A map showing the extent of flooding in and around Onagawa.
A map showing the extent of flooding in and around Onagawa.

A map showing the extent of flooding in and around Matsushima and Shiogama.
A map showing the extent of flooding in and around Matsushima and Shiogama.

Related Tags

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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