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High court overturns ruling against ex-Tepco executives
High court overturns ruling against ex-Tepco executives

Japan Times

time4 days ago

  • Politics
  • Japan Times

High court overturns ruling against ex-Tepco executives

Tokyo High Court on Friday overturned a lower court ruling that ordered four former Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings (Tepco) executives to pay about ¥13 trillion in damages in total over the March 2011 nuclear disaster in Fukushima Prefecture. Toshikazu Kino, presiding judge at the high court, found the executives unable to predict the tsunami that triggered the triple reactor meltdown at Tepco's Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant. In their lawsuit filed in March 2012, Tepco shareholders demanded that five former executives pay some ¥23 trillion in damages to the company over the nuclear accident. In July 2022, Tokyo District Court ordered former Tepco Chairman Tsunehisa Katsumata, who died in October last year, former President Masataka Shimizu, 80, and former executive vice presidents Ichiro Takekuro, 79, and Sakae Muto, 74, to pay a total of ¥13,321 billion in compensation to the company. The ruling said that the executives had been able to predict the tsunami. In a separate criminal trial of Katsumata, Takekuro and Muto for their alleged professional negligence resulting in death and injury over the nuclear accident, the ruling that acquitted them became final in March this year. In 2008, Tepco estimated a tsunami with a height of up to 15.7 meters, exceeding the height of the nuclear plant site, based on a long-term evaluation by a government-backed research institute that predicted that a magnitude 8-class, tsunami-causing earthquake could strike off the coast of eastern Japan. Hearings on the shareholders' lawsuit focused on the credibility of the long-term evaluation and whether the nuclear disaster could have been prevented by measures against flooding. The shareholders argued that the incident could have been avoided if a measure had been taken to prevent flooding of facilities at the nuclear plant. The former executives claimed that the long-term evaluation had no scientific credibility and that the accident could not have been avoided even if such a measure had been put in place because the size of the tsunami was very large. In its 2022 ruling, the district court acknowledged the reliability of the long-term evaluation and pointed out that the former executives neglected to instruct staff to take tsunami countermeasures even though the accident could have been avoided if they did so. The district court recognized the liability of the four former executives, excluding Akio Komori, a 72-year-old former managing executive officer, who learned of Tepco's tsunami estimate eight months before the disaster. In its Friday ruling, Kino, the high court presiding judge, said the long-term evaluation was not sufficient to obligate the former executives to instruct staff to act promptly in preparation for a possible massive tsunami.

Acquittal of two former Tepco executives finalized
Acquittal of two former Tepco executives finalized

Japan Times

time12-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Japan Times

Acquittal of two former Tepco executives finalized

Japanese court rulings acquitting two former executives of Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings over the 2011 nuclear disaster at its Fukushima No. 1 power plant were finalized on Tuesday. The trial ended without anyone facing criminal responsibility for the unprecedented accident, rated Level 7 — the worst — on the International Nuclear and Radiological Event Scale. The development came after lawyers acting as prosecutors did not file an appeal against the Supreme Court's decision last week that upheld the not-guilty verdicts of Tokyo district and high courts for former Tepco vice presidents Ichiro Takekuro, 78, and Sakae Muto, 74. The two, as well as former Tepco Chairman Tsunehisa Katsumata, were indicted by the lawyers acting as prosecutors in February 2016 on charges of business negligence resulting in death and injury over the triple meltdown at the power plant in Fukushima Prefecture that followed a massive earthquake and tsunami on March 11, 2011. The district court in September 2019 found all three not guilty, with the high court backing the decision in January 2023. As Katsumata died at age 84 in October last year, his case was dismissed the following month. On Tuesday, over 50 people gathered in front of the Supreme Court building in Tokyo in protest. "An acquaintance of mine died due to the effects of the nuclear accident," said Hiromu Murata, 82, who relocated to Yokohama from the Fukushima city of Soma due to the accident. "Those who have died cannot rest in peace with such a judicial decision."

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