Inside the ‘exclusion zone’ near Japan’s contaminated Fukushima nuclear plant
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Homes are empty and radiation-contaminated soil piles up inside the “exclusion zone” near the devastated Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.
A house sits on the scarred landscape inside the exclusion zone close to the devastated Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Namie, Japan. The area is closed to residents because of radiation contamination from the Fukushima nuclear disaster.
(Christopher Furlong / Getty Images)Homes are empty and radiation-contaminated soil piles up inside the “exclusion zone” near the devastated Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.
Workers search for radiation-contaminated debris in the city of Minamisoma. March 11 is the fifth anniversary of the magnitude 9.0 earthquake and tsunami that claimed the lives of 15,894, and the subsequent damage to the reactors at the Fukushima nuclear plant.
(Christopher Furlong / Getty Images)Personal items are strewn around a tsunami-damaged home Minamisoma. The nuclear disaster forced the evacuation of 99,750 people.
(Christopher Furlong / Getty Images)Thousands of bags of radiation-contaminated soil and debris wait to be processed in the town of Naraha.
(Christopher Furlong / Getty Images)The elements and nature take over homes and businesses in the town of Namie.
(Christopher Furlong / Getty Images)A graveyard stands in the tsunami-scarred landscape in Namie.
(Christopher Furlong / Getty Images)A house in in Namie.
(Christopher Furlong / Getty Images)