S to an abandoned school near tokyo, where they lived in cramped, shared common areas, many families to a room, and are provided with three boxed lunches per day. The refugees were given permits to return home to collect personal items, but only for two hours. Just before this broadcast, democracy now producer mike burke spoke with an evacuee from futaba. She was one of hundreds of anti nuclear protesters who were outside the official residence of the japanese Prime Minister demonstrating. I am from futaba. Right now we have evacuated and we are living in temperate housing in tokyo, in a space provided by the government. I am coming here every friday to demonstrate. Against the Nuclear Power facilities. Fled futaba, we have nothing. We lost everything. We couldnt bring anything from our house. We did not have a toothbrush. We did not have a blanket. We did not have towels. We had nothing. It was truly hell. And we thought it would be much better to die. But now we are here. We want to
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