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26 April 2011, The New York Times

Culture of complicity tied to stricken nuclear plant

The nuclear regulatory system in Japan has been held tightly by the government and nuclear industry over the past 50 years, with executives adamant on expanding nuclear power. As the March 11 natural disaster rocked Japan with a nuclear crisis, what part does Japan’s “nuclear power village” play?

Given the fierce insularity of Japan’s nuclear industry, it was perhaps fitting that an outsider exposed the most serious safety cover-up in the history of Japanese nuclear power. It took place at Fukushima Daiichi, the plant that Japan has been struggling to get under control since last month’s earthquake and tsunami.

In 2000, Kei Sugaoka, a Japanese-American nuclear inspector who had done work for General Electric at Daiichi, told Japan’s main nuclear regulator about a cracked steam dryer that he believed was being concealed. If exposed, the revelations could have forced the operator, Tokyo Electric Power, to do what utilities least want to do: undertake costly repairs.