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Namie
Namie - a village in Japan, located on the Pacific coast. It is famous for its spectacular views, mountains and forests. March 11, 2011 the village suffered from the earthquake and tsunami and subsequent accident at the Fukushima I and later the town was evacuated. Ghost Town Namie in Fukushima. Small monument to the victims of the tragedy in front of an abandoned house, 6.4 km from the nuclear power plant "Fukushima-1", 22 September 2013. More than 20 thousand former residents of Namie can visit their former homes once a month, with special permission, but remain within the exclusion zone is prohibited:
Firefighters from Kyoto have another small monument to the victims of the earthquake and tsunami, the city Namie in Fukushima, 15 September 2013:
Vending Machine, which brought the tsunami in abandoned rice fields inside the exclusion zone in Fukushima, 21 September 2013:
View of the former elementary school in the town of Namie, 6.4 km to the nuclear power plant "Fukushima-1", 23 September 2013:
Class of elementary school, Namie Town, Fukushima Prefecture, September 22, 2013:
Facilities at the school, 22 September 2013:
62-year-old resident, received a special permit to visit the ghost town of Namie, looking at his former home things, September 14, 2013:
The doctor conducts a survey of the thyroid gland at the 4-year-old girl in the city of Iwaki, 18 September 2013. The nonprofit organization provides free screening of the thyroid gland of children Fukushima area most affected by the radiation:
The visitor takes pictures of Hokkaido tsunami destroyed coastal areas in the town of Namie, September 15, 2013:
59-year-old woman with a portrait of his father, where he killed himself, Fukushima Prefecture, 18 September 2013. The 102-year-old farmer who lived in his house all his life, could not survive the move, when the government declared the region a zone of alienation and ordered residents to evacuate and hanged:
View of an abandoned house in the town of Namie, 15 September 2013. Nature comes:
Another woman received a permit for a short stay in a ghost town. Fukushima Prefecture, September 22, 2013:
58-year-old Japanese man, who refused to leave the contaminated exclusion zone, 17 September 2013. The former contains a farmer near his home 20 dogs and 500 animals left behind during the evacuation of the former owners. In honor of the disaster at the nuclear power plant "Fukushima-1" he called this dog Atom.
The device warning system in the former elementary school in the town of Namie, 22 September 2013. 2 years and 7 months since the disaster being felt:
Abandoned bicycles near the train station, Fukushima Prefecture, September 22, 2013:
Employees preparing for radiation measurements of vehicles and people leaving the exclusion zone around nuclear power plant "Fukushima-1" September 13, 2013. A total of 160 000 people left their homes around the nuclear power plant after the government announced the evacuation in March 2011:
The radiation level near the city center in the town of Namie, 15 September 2013.
Worker cuts the thick vegetation that has captivated the ghost town of Namie in Fukushima, 13 September 2013:
Beach near the city of Iwaki, September 19, 2013. Here we see a concrete barrier against possible tsunamis:
Street lighting in the ghost town of Namie is still working properly, September 23, 2013:
Security officers blocked passage in the exclusion zone around nuclear power plant "Fukushima-1" to people without permits, September 13, 2013:
Almost all the beaches in the exclusion zone are closed from March 11, 2011. Here is the Fukushima Prefecture today.
Source: vk.com
Firefighters from Kyoto have another small monument to the victims of the earthquake and tsunami, the city Namie in Fukushima, 15 September 2013:
Vending Machine, which brought the tsunami in abandoned rice fields inside the exclusion zone in Fukushima, 21 September 2013:
View of the former elementary school in the town of Namie, 6.4 km to the nuclear power plant "Fukushima-1", 23 September 2013:
Class of elementary school, Namie Town, Fukushima Prefecture, September 22, 2013:
Facilities at the school, 22 September 2013:
62-year-old resident, received a special permit to visit the ghost town of Namie, looking at his former home things, September 14, 2013:
The doctor conducts a survey of the thyroid gland at the 4-year-old girl in the city of Iwaki, 18 September 2013. The nonprofit organization provides free screening of the thyroid gland of children Fukushima area most affected by the radiation:
The visitor takes pictures of Hokkaido tsunami destroyed coastal areas in the town of Namie, September 15, 2013:
59-year-old woman with a portrait of his father, where he killed himself, Fukushima Prefecture, 18 September 2013. The 102-year-old farmer who lived in his house all his life, could not survive the move, when the government declared the region a zone of alienation and ordered residents to evacuate and hanged:
View of an abandoned house in the town of Namie, 15 September 2013. Nature comes:
Another woman received a permit for a short stay in a ghost town. Fukushima Prefecture, September 22, 2013:
58-year-old Japanese man, who refused to leave the contaminated exclusion zone, 17 September 2013. The former contains a farmer near his home 20 dogs and 500 animals left behind during the evacuation of the former owners. In honor of the disaster at the nuclear power plant "Fukushima-1" he called this dog Atom.
The device warning system in the former elementary school in the town of Namie, 22 September 2013. 2 years and 7 months since the disaster being felt:
Abandoned bicycles near the train station, Fukushima Prefecture, September 22, 2013:
Employees preparing for radiation measurements of vehicles and people leaving the exclusion zone around nuclear power plant "Fukushima-1" September 13, 2013. A total of 160 000 people left their homes around the nuclear power plant after the government announced the evacuation in March 2011:
The radiation level near the city center in the town of Namie, 15 September 2013.
Worker cuts the thick vegetation that has captivated the ghost town of Namie in Fukushima, 13 September 2013:
Beach near the city of Iwaki, September 19, 2013. Here we see a concrete barrier against possible tsunamis:
Street lighting in the ghost town of Namie is still working properly, September 23, 2013:
Security officers blocked passage in the exclusion zone around nuclear power plant "Fukushima-1" to people without permits, September 13, 2013:
Almost all the beaches in the exclusion zone are closed from March 11, 2011. Here is the Fukushima Prefecture today.
Source: vk.com