Japanese Olympic football teams to train in nuclear clean-up zone

The Japan Football Association (JFA) said on Monday that the Japanese men's and women's teams would hold their training camps at J-Village, once the country's centre of excellence until it was taken over by plant operators following the 2011 nuclear disaster.

Published : Feb 22, 2016 12:57 IST , Tokyo

Japan's players line up for a team photo at the AFC U-23 Championship in Doha.
Japan's players line up for a team photo at the AFC U-23 Championship in Doha.
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Japan's players line up for a team photo at the AFC U-23 Championship in Doha.

Japan's Olympic football teams will train for the Tokyo 2020 Games at a complex currently being used as a base for thousands of workers cleaning up the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant.

The Japan Football Association (JFA) said on Monday that the Japanese men's and women's teams would hold their training camps at J-Village, once the country's centre of excellence until it was taken over by plant operators following the 2011 nuclear disaster.

"The teams will use the J-Village facility as a training base," JFA communications chief Takato Maruyama told AFP. "It is something the JFA had been talking about but a timeline hadn't been formally approved by the executive board, until now," Maruyama said.

J-Village is on the fringes of the old 12-mile (20-kilometre) exclusion zone around the stricken plant, which suffered a triple reactor meltdown after a giant tsunami slammed into it in March, 2011, causing massive radiation leaks and forcing the evacuation of more than 150,000 people.

As the nuclear crisis raged, J-Village became the front line in the fight to control the situation, with helipads, medical centre and dormitories hastily erected for workers filing in and out of the plant in their protective suits and masks.

"Obviously the complex will need some refurbishment but that is the time frame we have heard from TEPCO (Tokyo Electric Power Company) and J-Village," said Maruyama.

Despite the symbolic value of training at the complex, the JFA insisted that safety was of utmost importance.

"We can't make any specific comment on radiation but clearly you can't play football in places where it isn't safe for people to go," said Maruyama, referring to the proposal to reopen J-Village in 2018.

"Obviously it will be opened on condition that all decontamination work has been completed safely," he added. "We can't say (at this point) if that decontamination will have been fully carried out and whether there will be zero effect from radiation by that time."

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