<Anchor>

In the Fukushima area, you can see the torch relay at the Tokyo Olympics. We're delivering a series of reports on the radiation issues in Japan. This time, let's take a look at the route of the torch relay.

At the corner of 'In fact,' Park Se-yong and Lee Kyung-won reviewed.

<Reporter>

When a torch fired from Athens, Greece, arrives in Japan, the first place to go is called `` J Village '' in Fukushima Prefecture.

20 kilometers away from the nuclear power plant, there's still a lot of controversy that's a bigger problem.

First, I will look at the report of Lee Kyung-won reporter and explain.

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<Reporter>

It is the reaction of Japanese people who watched the Tokyo Olympic torch.

[Oh good! (Is this real?) It looks like a flower!]

The Seonghwabong recycled aluminum used in the temporary housing of the victims during the Great East Japan Earthquake.

It means to overcome the scars of the earthquake.

I checked where this torch went to Fukushima.

Start with J Village as you heard earlier. I feel like I'm falling down and then up again. After that, they hover around the nuclear power plant.

The first day ends in Minamisoma, within 20 km of the nuclear power plant.

I saw a control area on the course, a so-called 'difficult return area', and it is mostly near.

These routes have been phased out of control five years ago, but even the former residents are reluctant to return.

The return rate is only 23.2%, 60% of those who return are elderly, and there are reports that young people who have children are nervous about radiation.

When the torch is started, there will be a lot of tourists, including the reporters.

At the Fukushima Prefecture Torch Transportation Route Decision Internal Conference last year, the route should be set for the 'Revival Olympics', and the earthquake-affected area should be considered for the course.

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<Reporter>

As you can see, there seems to be a problem with the torch shipping route, but the more serious is the Okuma region.

Originally the entire area of ​​this neighborhood was designated as 'Harding Return Area'.

If you live for more than two years, you have high radiation levels that increase your chances of cancer.

So exactly where the torch goes, the Japanese government lifted the blue area on the left side of the area about half of the time from the troubled return zone last April.

I've removed enough pollution.

So I was wondering if the torch passed through the blue area, and I looked at the satellite map and found that most of the mountain was like this.

You can't send a torch on the mountain, but you'll have to go through the city area.

Let's look at the radiation dose today (23th) of this area.

You'll see a lot of red dots right now, all of these are high radiation doses.

Assuming that the torch passed a little distance from the nuclear power plant, we looked 5 km away.

3.36 microbits per hour. What is this? If the event organizer stayed here for a couple of days, then I get a dose of one or two chest X-rays.

The longer the preparations, the greater the exposure.

Children should be especially careful.

Japan is saying that it will promote the reconstruction of Fukushima, and foreign tourists coming to the torch relay are likely to be unnecessarily exposed.

(Video Editing: Joon Hee Kim, CG: Jin Hoe Choi, Hyun Jung Jung)