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Japanese workers exposed to radioactive material

June 7, 2017

Five workers at a nuclear research facility in eastern Japan have been exposed to dangerously high levels of radiation. Authorities say a bag containing plutonium opened while the group was inspecting equipment.

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Japan Ibaraki Präfektur - Oarai Research & Developement Center
Image: picture-alliance/Kyodo

The Japan Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA) said Wednesday it was investigating what caused the accident at its Oarai Research and Development Center northeast of Tokyo.

The five workers had been carrying out a routine check on storage equipment inside one of the facility's "controlled" rooms when they came into contact with Plutonium-239 and other radioactive substances leaking from a torn bag, the agency said in a statement.

An initial survey detected radioactive materials on all five. Three of the men's nostrils were also contaminated, indicating they had inhaled toxic dust. Agency spokesman Masataka Tanimoto said one of the workers, aged in his 50s, had high levels of plutonium exposure in his lungs. The amount - 22,000 Becquerels - was nearly 1,000 times the dose found in his nostrils.

'Never heard of exposure this high'

Makoto Akashi, a doctor at the National Institute of Radiological Sciences, said that while the exposure may not be immediately life threatening, the worker would need to be monitored because the amount could add up over time. Internal contamination is considered extremely serious because of the cancer-causing risks associated with it.

Tanimoto of the JAEA said the workers did not show any visible signs of health problems and were undergoing further checks at a special radiation medical institute. He added that no radiation leaks were found outside the Oarai research building, which houses plutonium and uranium used to study new types of fuel for a fast reactor.

The country's Nuclear Regulation Authority Chairman Shunichi Tanaka used a press conference Wednesday to accuse the JAEA of complacency and poor safety standards.

"There appears to have been a significant level of radiation exposure. I've never heard of exposure this high in my career," Tanaka told reporters.

Anti-nuclear sentiment has grown in Japan in the years following the 2011 Fukushima nuclear meltdown, considered the country's worst nuclear power accident.

nm/msh (AP, Reuters, AFP, dpa)