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Japanese Risk Radiation To Save Stranded Dogs

By RYAN NAKASHIMA   04/14/11 04:13 AM ET   AP

Japan Dogs Saved

TOKYO -- When Etsumi Ogino saw a news photo of a pack of shelties wandering through an abandoned town near Japan's tsunami-damaged nuclear plant, she thought of her own 13-year-old canine Kein and jumped into action.

"My heart trembled," said Ogino, a 56-year-old volunteer at an animal shelter in Chiba prefecture. "They looked just like my dog. I started searching for them right away."

She and others around Japan called Asahi.com, the website of the Asahi Shimbun newspaper, which had run the photo. An Associated Press photographer had snapped that photo and others of the dogs on an empty street in Minami Soma city, an area evacuated because of radiation fears.

On Saturday, the AP gave her details of where the dogs were spotted.

Ogino relayed the information to a team of animal rescuers called Sheltie Rescue. By then, the group had been getting emails from dog lovers around the country about the abandoned pack.

Through emails and Internet research it was established that the owner of the dogs was a breeder in Minami Soma. The group contacted the Fukushima city branch of the Japan Collie Club, tracked the owner down by phone at a shelter and got her go-ahead to rescue the dogs.

In the wee hours of Sunday morning, seven volunteers left Tokyo and drove over broken roads and past demolished houses to meet three other volunteers in the ghost town that Minami Soma has become. Some had prepared radiation suits and others wore simple vinyl raincoats.

The first two to arrive found the pack around the Odaka train station, near the owner's home, where the AP team had last seen them.

"They were waiting for their owner," said Tamiko Nakamura, a volunteer who went with the group from Tokyo.

The dogs had been left some dry food, and weren't starving.

It took a while to entice them with snacks, and six or seven were bundled into each car. The group saved 20 dogs in all.

Most were taken to a veterinary clinic in Kanagawa prefecture just west of Tokyo. Others are being cared for by individuals in other areas.

The owner, worn down by the disaster and worrying about her dogs, was "extremely happy," Nakamura said. She said the owner did not want her identity revealed.

Nakamura only regrets that some of the dogs in the pack ran away and countless others are still stranded in the evacuation zone.

"There are still some left behind," she said. "I'm concerned about them and want to pull them out."

___

Associated Press writer Eric Talmadge and photographer Hiro Komae spotted the dogs in Minami Soma on April 7.

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TOKYO -- When Etsumi Ogino saw a news photo of a pack of shelties wandering through an abandoned town near Japan's tsunami-damaged nuclear plant, she thought of her own 13-year-old canine Kein and jum...
TOKYO -- When Etsumi Ogino saw a news photo of a pack of shelties wandering through an abandoned town near Japan's tsunami-damaged nuclear plant, she thought of her own 13-year-old canine Kein and jum...
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12:34 PM on 06/12/2011
Good people.
And shelties are the best.
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merrymay
12:37 PM on 04/26/2011
This is good news to people who love animals.
In the Floyd evacuation we left our 2 large dogs behind in the pandemonium. But I went crazy and hysterical, so we turned down a side street and went back. They came with us on long clotheslines and we slept outdoors at the evacuation center! Floyd went north anyway.

The Red Cross knows that in a disaster a pet problem is also a huge people problem...people especially need their pets when a catastrophe happens. I'm so glad to hear the Japanese are really trying to help people save their animals.
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Lunamoth
Already against the next man-made disaster
11:52 AM on 04/26/2011
A truly beautiful story.
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12:08 AM on 04/20/2011
Looks like they're multiplying at an incredible rate!
It's only a matter of time before a giant mutated dog
is created!
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12:11 AM on 04/20/2011
Dogzilla...I hope that's not 4 comments down because that's comedy GOLD
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Itsbeenalongday
Eliminating poverty is smart business
06:27 AM on 04/19/2011
The Japanese nuclear fallout could well be it's unplanned revenge against the US for the nuclear damage caused to it 60 years ago if you can believe Helen Caldicott http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Itr6GDuOOBY&feature=share
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Icantbelieveher
What you do for the least of my brethren, you do f
08:15 PM on 04/16/2011
Those dogs look like my Pepper, so i would definitely want someone to rescue her if something happened to us!
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TBrennan
10:45 PM on 04/15/2011
What have they ever done to stop the slaughter at the Cove? I beleve a cetacean is on a higher level of the Philogenic scale than a canine? Bless them all. Japan must be a very weird place.

The world's Oceans would be better without Japan.
11:01 PM on 04/15/2011
Japan is weird? Go and tell the people of northeastern Japan that they're weird for saving dogs, and we'll see who's weird.
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TBrennan
11:16 PM on 04/15/2011
OK, wierd is a wrong word. How does this canine kndness reconcile with what happens at The Cove?
11:07 PM on 04/15/2011
One of the nicest people in the world are Japaniese , very generous !
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Endotoxin
Blast Corps
10:22 PM on 04/15/2011
No offense to dog lovers here but I think we should worry about the human orphans first.
11:11 PM on 04/15/2011
They are not left alone , trust me ! Plenty of organizations out there helping humans .
BTW , have you donate to any of them , I have , talk is cheap ):
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Welease Wodewick
What's her name? Virginia Plain!
05:35 AM on 04/17/2011
Are there any orphans abandoned, and running, uncared for and unfed, on the streets of any town in Japan?
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Vegan Girl
Compassion for all
10:20 PM on 04/15/2011
I was always but I am even more impressed with the Japanese people.
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Pembrokelib
04:59 PM on 04/21/2011
If you had lived through the atrocities committed by the Japanese in World War Two, you might not be quite so impressed. They may have improved a lot, but torture of American servicemen and others was an approved way of life in the past.
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Lunamoth
Already against the next man-made disaster
11:59 AM on 04/26/2011
There is so much stereotyping and generalizations going on here. Yes, there were cruel people during WWII. Americans (and Austrians, and Inuit, and Native Americans, and Indonesians, and Hawaiians, and Australians, and the English, and the French...wow, there are cruel people among them and there are wonderful people among them. Don't be so judgmental.
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merrymay
01:00 PM on 04/26/2011
My father went through the war as a Naval officer. He made the landings with the marines at Guadalcanal and many things too many to mention. On a ship bound for the home Islands of Japan in 1945, he was relieved to hear about the bomb...who was not?
But he told me often he never held a grudge about it all...that our country wasn't perfect. He was glad Japan rebuilt so well.
I agree the Japanese culture at that time led to horrific conduct. But refusing to nurse ill will helped my dad and others like him to live long, productive lives without hatred.
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Dr Juan
Ron Paul -More Liberty, Less Government, No Fed
10:16 PM on 04/15/2011
Yep, there is going to be yet another uninhabitable blotch on the planet left behind by the promise of nuclear energy. Cleanup is a B!TC#.

http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,756369-14,00.html
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10:13 PM on 04/15/2011
Now if only they would take care of their own abandoned dogs in the parks and cities all over their country. I hope they don't just take those rescued dogs and dump them in the park. I've lived in Japan for 4 years and they treat parks like dumping stations for cats and dogs. Seeing packs of diseased sick cats in packs of 20 was a common and sad sight.
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Welease Wodewick
What's her name? Virginia Plain!
05:36 AM on 04/17/2011
Sadly, the same situation exists in many countries around the world. Those who care, are doing their best to help, but resources are always limited.
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bobncar
for the good of all, not just the chosen few
04:44 PM on 04/17/2011
Just like here in the good old U.S. I live in a national park reserve, and every day we have abandoned dogs approach our door. WE have several that live with us, and it's a b1tch to find home for the others. Some....a lot .....of humans have no heart, and if they can't afford dogs and cats or any other companion to share their home, then they have no business having them in the first place. There should be licensing, and background checks for anyone wanting to adopt a pet.....from a baby chicks to a horse. And once owned all dogs and cats should be spayed. No puppies or kittens to end up in shelters only to be put down.

This is a soapbox I'll never voluntarily come off of, so all of you that want to snark...have at it!!
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08:28 PM on 04/17/2011
No, I don't think it is at all like the good ol' U.S. There are no government programs in Japan for abandoned pets, there are no laws against animal abuse. I've seen so many abused animals right in front of my eyes, that it's heartbreaking. At least in the United States there is a common concept that animals should be protected, that leaving them on the street or in the park is not healthy or right. There is a huge difference between the US and Japan.
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scionfox
WINNING
08:50 PM on 04/15/2011
That's a wonderful story; however, extremely dangerous as animals carry radiation longer and I hope that the rescuers are not child bearing age as HP had an article about Chernobal with the most heartbreaking pictures of the children born to the parents exposed to the radiation.
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Mattie
My Daddy taught me to beware the good Christian
08:54 PM on 04/15/2011
I saw that, it was horrible. I'm just happy someone is helping the poor animals left behind. Who knows if they will get sick or not, but they shouldn't be left to suffer and die like they are. I was hoping there was an update to the story, if they've rescued more, or if they had to stop because of the danger. I feel so bad for the people of Japan, and I feel bad for all the animals that are suffering along with them.
09:32 PM on 04/15/2011
I'd think that a good bath for the dog would take care of most of the danger to others.

When you say "animals carry radiation longer", what do you mean? Humans and animals are awfully similar as far as our bodies go ...
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scionfox
WINNING
10:09 PM on 04/15/2011
No that is incorrect, they are still finding animals with radiation from Cherynobal that are 1st and second generations. If a good bath was all it took for an animal, then radiation would not be a problem all they would have to do is just wash everything down. Animals and humans are not awfully similar in some ways. You must factor in their hair. Also, for a person to go into that type of area where radiation is at that level with only a raincoat will definitely suffer the consequences with their health.

Radiation is extremely dangerous. As a true dog lover, I understand the compassion; however, the consequences and side affects of the radiation exposure that these brave people exposed themselves to are coming at a high price that they do not realize at this moment.
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scionfox
WINNING
08:44 PM on 04/15/2011
If it were my dog, I would probably risk radiation too.
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Mattie
My Daddy taught me to beware the good Christian
08:56 PM on 04/15/2011
I think I would too. I tell myself I would never leave my pets behind, but a lot of people thought they would be allowed back after a day or so, they didn't know it was going to be this long. I hope more can be done to help these poor dogs and cats, and other animals left behind.
08:59 PM on 04/15/2011
I really hope they can be helped.
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TBrennan
08:09 PM on 04/15/2011
A great story. Now if the rest of the Japanese people could extend the same compassion and respect to the Ocean's cetaceans.