Farmers Livelihoods Wither in Japan s Nuclear Crisis from NYTimes By MICHAEL WINES
"At least one farmer has been pushed over the edge. ... a 64-year-old farmer ...killed himself one day after the government imposed aTOWA, Japan If Japan s leaders regard the collapse of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear complex as this nation s greatest crisis in decades, Saichi Sato has a different perspective. From where he sits in this leafy village of 8,000 about 25 miles from Daiichi, he says, this is the greatest crisis in 400 years.
ban on the sale of cabbages from the prefecture...The farmer [had] lost his house in the
earthquake but had a field of 7,500 organically grown cabbages ready for
harvest when the prohibition was announced."
Mr. Sato, 59, is a 17th-generation family farmer, a proprietor of 14 acres of greenhouses and fields where he grows rice, tomatoes, spinach and other vegetables. Or did grow: Last week, the national government banned the sale of farm products not just from Towa, but also from a stretch of north-central Japan extending south almost to Tokyo, for fear that they had been tainted with radiation.
Already, Mr. Sato stands to lose a fifth of his income because of the ban. If the government cannot contain the Daiichi disaster, he could lose a farm that his family has tended since the 1600s.