FUKUSHIMA, Japan — About 30 miles from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, 130 cats and three dogs live in a drafty old bed-and-breakfast. ADVERTISING FUKUSHIMA, Japan — About 30 miles from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, 130 cats
FUKUSHIMA, Japan — About 30 miles from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, 130 cats and three dogs live in a drafty old bed-and-breakfast.
Cluttered but surprisingly calm, the Nyander Guard animal shelter was created after the March 2011 nuclear disaster here.
As residents fled their homes, an estimated 20,000 pets were left behind in the “exclusion zone” — all the land within 12.5 miles of the plant. Akira Honda, a local businessman and animal lover, posted a call for volunteers online.
The first rescue mission took place two months after the meltdown.
Sometimes the volunteers would join former residents on approved visits to reclaim belongings. But mostly, they’d sneak in on their own.
“At the beginning, the gates were just temporary, built from steel pipes and things,” said Takemi Shirota, 39, who has worked at the shelter since its founding. “It was easy to move them to the side, and go in.
“We received lots of requests from pet owners to go and capture their animals for them,” she said.
That August, police briefly detained a few volunteers, and then reinforced the barriers, making unapproved entry more difficult.
A few months later, the shelter joined the first — and, it turned out, last — mission organized by government authorities to help the abandoned pets.
Five years after the disaster, the areas around the nuclear plant are a suburban wilderness. Tall grass grows in the dirt between railroad ties, and traffic lights blink at empty intersections.
The shelter has rescued about 750 dogs and cats.
Shelter workers enter the exclusion zone every few weeks with residents who have permits to stock food stations for animals left behind. There isn’t much capacity to rescue more. “I have seen many dead cats, many dogs who starved to death,” Shirota said.
At the shelter, the staff struggles to find people willing to adopt the animals. “In Japan, people still buy their pets from pet shops,” Shirota said. “Being a foster owner of cats and dogs is kind of a new idea for them.”
The dogs are generally healthy, but the cats appear less so. Shelter workers suspect that being lower to the ground and licking their fur have exposed them to more radioactive particles. Sometimes they die for no apparent reason.