Minamata: Real Life Horror Show
by
Mike (in Tokyo) Rogers
by Mike Rogers
Minamata
is a very small fishing and farming town in Kumamoto, on Kyushu
island in southern Japan. A beautiful place, graced by a gem-like
harbor and a rushing river, Minamata does not seem to be the scene
of a tragedy. Today, most young Japanese people are unfamiliar with
what happened here so many years ago. But, just like Hiroshima or
Nagasaki, Minamata is world-famous for a different kind of manmade
catastrophe.
About
fifty years ago, strange things began to happen in Minamata. At
first, unable to understand what was happening to them, the local
people were afraid to talk.
Some
of the townspeople began experiencing delirium, blackouts, and numbness
of their arms and legs. Soon, some of them became partially or completely
blind while others experienced slurred speech. Others were thought
to have become insane when, unable to control the movements of their
appendages, they shouted at random. Those afflicted were rumored
to be possessed by the devil when they could not control their facial
muscles and their contorted expression made them look like "monsters."
Local doctors were dumb-founded by the epidemic outbreak.
The
sinister symptoms began to afflict the animals of Minamata. Cats
and dogs began to exhibit inexplicable behavior. Townspeople reported
that cats were "committing suicide." Some cats chased their tails
for days on end until they dropped from exhaustion. Dogs disappeared
and were found dead days later. Even more shocking, afflicted birds
began falling from the skies.
In
1932 the small town of Minamata boasted only one large factory which
was owned by a company called the "Chisso Corporation." In Japanese
the word "chisso" means nitrogen. The Chisso Corporation was in
the fertilizer business.
For
hundreds of years, the townspeople of Minamata had lived primitive
lives as fishers and farmers. Minamatans were glad when, in 1901,
the Chisso Corporation set up a plant. Employment became abundant.
By 1932, the Chisso plant had become very large. Since the Chisso
Corporation was not involved with munitions manufacturing, they
were spared bombing during the war and confiscation by the allies
after the end of World War Two. By 1950 Chisso had become one of
the leading businesses in Japan. Hand-in-hand, the Japanese government
worked with companies like the Chisso Corporation in order to provide
much needed jobs to a post war Japan. Chisso became so successful
that it expanded into other chemical manufacturing.
By
1953, the strange plague had directly affected almost one-half of
all the people in the small town of Minamata. People who came down
with this bizarre disease were treated like lepers. Because no one
knew if the disease were contagious, society shunned the sufferers.
Minamata
babies began to be born with grotesque deformities and massive brain
damage. Minamata fishermen began to catch two and three headed fish.
At this point the government and the Chisso Corporation became alarmed.

The
Agricultural Ministry of Japan financed by the Chisso Corporation
ordered research into the causes of the freakish sickness
that was attacking the people and killing the wildlife.
In
1956, Dr. Hajime Hosokawa was assigned to study the case. Dr. Hosokawa
was an honest man, and even though he was paid by and worked at
the Chisso Corporation Hospital, he reported, "an unclarified disease
of the central nervous system has broken out in Minamata." Hosokawa's
report pointed to chemical dumping by Chisso. The Chisso Corporation
didn't like this news at all and "removed" Dr. Hosokawa. So as to
not alarm the populace, Chisso and the Japanese government covered-up
Dr. Hosokawa's findings. Chisso continued with their business in
Minamata Bay.
By
1958, the cover-up was well under-way while the disease gained momentum.
At this time, the Chisso Corporation tried to hide the problems
by moving their business to nearby Minamata River. But after a few
months, people near the river began to experience the symptoms of
the strange disease.
By
now, people were beginning to panic. The government of Kumamoto
decided that they had to act. But instead of forcing the Chisso
Corporation to suspend operations, the Kumamoto government made
it illegal for the Minamata fishermen to sell locally caught fish.
You read right. The Kumamoto authorities did not make it illegal
for people to catch and eat local fish, they made it illegal
for the local fishermen to sell their catch on the open market.
The new law caused the Minamata area economy to suffer anew. Since
Minamatans no longer had the money to purchase foodstuffs, they
were forced to eat more locally caught fish.
By
1968, the problem had grown to crisis proportions. The Chisso Corporation
began acting like the mafia by forcing people to accept hush money
in return for signing contracts that absolved the Chisso Corporation
from liability for damages. The Minamatans were ignorant of the
law. Their livelihood and their families were destroyed. What else
could they do but accept Chisso's "hush money" and keep their mouths
shut.
In
1969, a voluntary general citizens' group was formed to support
the victims of the disease. The People's Congress for the Minamata
Disease, joined with a group of lawyers and, using the testimony
of Dr. Hosokawa from his death-bed, sued the Japanese government
and the Chisso Corporation for damages related to what the lawyers
termed "Minamata Disease." It will never be fully known how many
people actually suffered from this disease some estimates
have the number in the tens of thousands but as of today,
only 3,000 people have been compensated.
Consider
the babies that were born deformed or brain-damaged. Imagine the
people who died or whose lives were ruined by an unknown disease.
Minamata disease is one from which there is no possibility of recovery.
It is a disease for which there is no cure. And today, that disease
is known as Methyl
Mercury poisoning.
For
mankind there would be more cases to follow: Three Mile Island,
Love Canal, Chernobyl, and Bhopal to name a few. But people
should not forget that the world's very first large scale man-made
environmental disaster was covered-up by the government which was
elected to protect its citizens a disaster called Minamata.
- This
article edited by Elizabeth Gyllensvard
December
14, 2004
Mike
(in Tokyo) Rogers [send
him mail] was born and raised in the USA and moved to Japan
in 1984. He has worked as an independent writer, producer, and personality
in the mass media for nearly 30 years.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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