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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Japan slowly brings power to quake zone

Aftershock a blow to recovery

Jay Alabaster And Tomoko A. Hosaka Associated Press

ICHINOSEKI, Japan – Electrical power was slowly being restored in tsunami-ravaged northern Japan today following a strong aftershock, though more than a quarter-million homes remained in the dark.

A new wave of anxiety took hold as shoppers emptied store shelves and waited in long lines for gasoline after the magnitude-7.1 aftershock late Thursday.

It was another setback for those struggling to recover from the massive earthquake-spawned tsunami that wiped out hundreds of miles of the northeastern coast last month and killed as many as 25,000 people.

“I feel helpless. I am back to square one,” said Ryoichi Kubo, 52, who was forced to shut down his gas station in hard-hit Iwate prefecture (state) when the aftershock knocked out power. He had just finally reopened after the power outage and prolonged fuel shortage that followed the March 11 tsunami.

Three people died in Thursday’s aftershock, the worst since the day of the massive magnitude-9.0 quake. The latest tremor largely spared the nation’s nuclear power plants, and there was no sign of fresh problems at the troubled Fukushima Dai-ichi complex, which has been spewing radiation since it was swamped by the tsunami.

The contamination has raised concerns about food safety, and the government announced Friday that it was setting a new radiation standard for rice and would prohibit farmers from planting in soil with levels of radioactive cesium that are too high. Rice grown in soil not considered too contaminated will also be checked for radiation before it can be shipped.

The government in recent weeks has set the nation’s first-ever radiation limits for fish after radioactive water pouring into the ocean from the nuclear plant raised concerns about contamination. The fish limits are the same as those used for vegetables.

Officials also said Friday that they had lifted a ban on shipments of farm products grown in certain areas for the first time since the disaster. The ban was lifted on spinach and the leafy vegetable kakina grown in Gunma prefecture, as well as on milk produced in the western part of Fukushima, farthest from the plant.