The Japanese Imperiale Courts: Their Imperial Majesties In Memoriam of 2011 Earthquake victims
12:21:00
A national tribute was delivered on Friday March 11th in memory of Japan March 11th 2011 earthquake victims and tsunami in the northeast of the archipelago, natural disasters amplified by a nuclear accident whose country is not delivered. Despite the cold and often the drizzle, with flowers, candles, families have gathered as every year in Sendai, Ishinomaki, Rikuzentakata, Minamisanriku and other places of the Northeast. A minute of silence was observed at 14:46 (5:46 GMT) throughout the country, just when five years ago, on a Friday also occurred off the main island of Honshu a magnitude 9 earthquake that shook a large part of the country.
"Five years have passed since the disaster, over 20,000 victims were killed," said His Imperial Msajesty Emperor Akihito(who recovered from an Influenza diagnosis) at a ceremony in Tokyo, with his wife Her Imperial Majesty Empress Michiko standing by his side before a huge audience of white flowers and yellow surrounding a commemorative plaque "to the victims of the great disaster of Tohoku" (northeast). "Japan is a pretty spoiled by nature, but sometimes it can be dangerous," said the head of state. He added: "We can never forget the TV images showing a black wall of water" breaking on the cities devastated by the tsunami. "I want one way or another work for the prevention of natural disasters", told NHK teenager named Shiori. "When I go to the affected areas, I feel that the disaster is ever present," said Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has pledged a united government "to rebuild a stronger country."
March 11, 2011, nearly 18,500 lives were swept away by a tidal wave of such magnitude that it occurs in "once a millennium," say the old Japan. Some 3,000 other people died later as a result of the tragedy, because of the deterioration of their living conditions. For days, the media back on this March 11, 2011, a Friday too, reviving painful memories of the hordes of panicked employees hurriedly leaving the skyscrapers of Tokyo, trains overturned in the North-East, appalling pictures , scarcely credible, whole towns swept away by the tsunami, unable to contact his family, each more desperate for information that cascaded each other, thousands and tens of thousands of missing persons. And then at the end of the day, the first alarming signals from two nuclear plants in Fukushima (Daiichi and Daini), evacuation and days and days of anxiety orders.
Photo from Asahi
"Five years have passed since the disaster, over 20,000 victims were killed," said His Imperial Msajesty Emperor Akihito(who recovered from an Influenza diagnosis) at a ceremony in Tokyo, with his wife Her Imperial Majesty Empress Michiko standing by his side before a huge audience of white flowers and yellow surrounding a commemorative plaque "to the victims of the great disaster of Tohoku" (northeast). "Japan is a pretty spoiled by nature, but sometimes it can be dangerous," said the head of state. He added: "We can never forget the TV images showing a black wall of water" breaking on the cities devastated by the tsunami. "I want one way or another work for the prevention of natural disasters", told NHK teenager named Shiori. "When I go to the affected areas, I feel that the disaster is ever present," said Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has pledged a united government "to rebuild a stronger country."
March 11, 2011, nearly 18,500 lives were swept away by a tidal wave of such magnitude that it occurs in "once a millennium," say the old Japan. Some 3,000 other people died later as a result of the tragedy, because of the deterioration of their living conditions. For days, the media back on this March 11, 2011, a Friday too, reviving painful memories of the hordes of panicked employees hurriedly leaving the skyscrapers of Tokyo, trains overturned in the North-East, appalling pictures , scarcely credible, whole towns swept away by the tsunami, unable to contact his family, each more desperate for information that cascaded each other, thousands and tens of thousands of missing persons. And then at the end of the day, the first alarming signals from two nuclear plants in Fukushima (Daiichi and Daini), evacuation and days and days of anxiety orders.
Photo from Asahi
On 13th March, Their Imperial Majesties Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko attended the Charity Concert supporting the reconstruction from Great East Japan Earthquake took place in Tokyo. After the concert, Their Majesties met with the students from Fukushima Prefecture who performed the songs.
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