Japanese gov't drops appeal against "black rain" ruling, offers support for victims
Jul 27, 2021
Tokyo (Japan), July 27: Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said Monday the Japanese government has decided to give up on appealing against a recent ruling that recognized 84 people in Hiroshima Prefecture as eligible for state health care benefits for being exposed to radioactive "black rain" after the 1945 U.S. atomic bombing, local media reported Monday.
The government made the decision "given many of them are elderly and some have illnesses," Suga told local media, adding that the government would immediately seek to issue certificates to plaintiffs, the 84 people, to classify them as "hibakusha", or survivors of the atomic bombing, and consider measures to help other people in a similar situation.
Suga added that the ruling is not entirely acceptable, and later the government will make a clarification in a statement. The statement will be approved by Suga's Cabinet Tuesday, government officials said.
Residents of the state-designated "black rain" zone are able to receive free health checkups and atomic bomb survivors' certificates, which entitle them to medical benefits covering 11 specific illnesses caused by atomic radiation.
Since the plaintiffs lived outside of the designated zone, their applications for the medical benefits of atomic bomb survivors between 2015 and 2018 were rejected.
The Hiroshima High Court ruled on July 14 that the plaintiffs are eligible for the aid even though they were exposed to "black rain" outside of an area recognized by the government. It ruled radioactive rain fell across a wider area beyond the recognized zone, and the plaintiffs are likely to have suffered health damage caused by their exposure to radiation.
The deadline for appealing the ruling was set for Wednesday.
The plaintiffs and their lawyers submitted a petition with 8,440 signatures collected online to the Hiroshima prefectural and city governments on Monday, urging the central government not to appeal against the ruling.
Source: Xinhua