Japan will sack three top energy officials over their handling of the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant disaster and scandals that have fueled public mistrust in the country’s nuclear policy, the government said yesterday.
Japanese Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry Banri Kaieda told a press conference that he was planning sweeping staff changes at his powerful ministry, which both promotes and regulates the nuclear industry.
Kaieda said the reshuffle aimed to “breathe new life” into the ministry.
He signaled that the changes will include his ministry’s top bureaucrat, a vice minister, and the heads of the Agency for Natural Resources and the watchdog body, the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency.
“Regarding the personnel changes at the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, we have been discussing that for about a month,” Kaieda told reporters. “It will be on a significant scale.”
When asked whether the changes will include the top three energy officials, Kaieda responded: “It’s OK for you to think that.”
He said the changes would be officially announced later, without specifying when.
Since the March 11 earthquake and tsunami sparked the nuclear crisis, the ministry has come under intense criticism for its promotion of nuclear power and for seeking to manipulate public opinion by planting questions at open talks.
The comments followed a news report that Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan and Kaieda were in the final phase of talks about the personnel changes and that Kaieda himself was considering resigning soon after he dismisses the top officials.
Kaieda, who has been at odds with the prime minister in recent months, showed the strain on him amid the almost five-month-old nuclear crisis when he broke into tears during a recent grilling by opposition lawmakers.
Kan, a former grassroots activist, has advocated a nuclear-free Japan and criticized the ministry, which has formed cozy ties with the energy industry. Power companies have given cushy jobs to many retired government officials.
The public has grown distrustful of Japan’s nuclear policy amid the world’s worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl 25 years ago. The Fukushima plant is run by Tokyo Electric Power Co.
Public anger has intensified in recent weeks after media reported that the safety agency had asked power companies to mobilize their workers and contractors to plant questions in support of nuclear energy at public talks.
The nuclear safety agency, which should regulate, not promote, nuclear energy, said it would create a third-party panel to investigate the matter.
Kan is planning to split the watchdog agency away from the industry ministry to boost its independence and regulatory strength.
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