Guy Sneaks Into Fukushima Red Zone To Take Incredible Pictures

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Keow Wee Loong

Fukushima is a ghost town. Its 100,000 residents were evacuated seven years ago and it is off limits to all civilians – a fact ignored by a photographer who risked his life to take snapshots of the desolate region.

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Fukushima was devastated by The Great East Japan Earthquake, a magnitude 9.0 natural disaster which set off a nuclear disaster equal in its power of devastation at 2.46pm on March 11, 2011.

It was rendered an exclusion zone.

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Keow Wee Loong

Keow Wee Loong told UNILAD what he encountered in the abandoned towns – from the wild animals that chased him in the night to the fully-functional traffic lights and the lad’s magazines still unopened on the top supermarket shelves.

For seven years, calendars have remained frozen in time, pages never turned past March, 2011.

Animals are the only living beings for miles around, though many have been reduced to rotting carcasses.

Keow Wee Loong

After the earthquake hit, a 15-metre tsunami cut the power supply to Fukushima – disabling the power that cooled three Fukushima Daiichi reactors, causing a nuclear accident that was rated 7 on the INES scale, due to high radioactive releases over the course of a week.

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Daredevil photographer, Keow Wee Loong bypassed guards, metal gates and outran wild animals to gain access to the ghost town for one reason: Pure human curiosity.

Keow Wee Loong

Loong told UNILAD:

Walking [through Fukushima] in the early morning is really peaceful. The town is empty and the traffic lights are still working.

I was there because I was trying to capture more photos of the abandoned town in Fukushima, because I got some info that the government is going to reopen the town this year.

As it turns out, Loong’s source was correct.

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Keow Wee Loong

Recently, the town of Namie – one of the many affected by the Fukushima disaster – was reopened. Residents could finally pick up their laundry where they left off and their coins from the ground abandoned in the rush.

Loong continued, describing his journey into the danger zone:

I was in Tamioka, Futaba, Okuma, and the last town, Namie. I started the walk at 2am and ended around 4-5pm. I crossed by all four affected towns in the exclusion zone.

I was not allow to photograph and walk around the exclusion zone. The Japanese police said that this place is dangerous, especially for a photographer, and I am not allow to wander around.

Keow Wee Loong

That didn’t stop the daredevil photographer who has reported from violent protests and proposed to his wife by scaling one of the world’s tallest buildings.

Loong is a man who will do anything for the perfect photograph – on terra firma or not – and he told UNILAD that he persevered on his mission despite the safety risks.

The enigmatic photographer continued:

When I was in Japan I did try to take safety precautions – to buy a safety suit before entering – but I lost all my cash in Tokyo. I also visited Greenpeace Japan to get info and wanted to get some help on the suit but no help or info was given.

Keow Wee Loong

However, the radiation wasn’t Loong’s primary concern in the end; it was the pack of wild animals that now rule the region.

He described what he encountered:

An empty town with a lot of rotten food in the supermarket. Everything is untouched since the evacuation in 2011. I saw wild animals and the dogs would bark at me at night. I was chased by one. That was scary.

I thought the entire town would be looted clean – like Chernobyl – but most of the stalls in Fukushima are still filled with merchandise… Books, jewellery, everything.

Keow Wee Loong

Loong described letting himself into unlocked doors and perpetually open supermarkets, wandering around and surveying the damage like the king of a fallen domain.

Everything Loong saw was against his expectation, he said, adding Fukushima is ‘not an ordinary image of how a ghost town looks’.

You can watch some of the GoPro footage Loong shot during his day out in Fukushima below:

On April 1, 2017, the Japanese government ceased restrictions on access to Namie; the first train pulled into the railway station, busses reinstated their service, and 21,000 locals returned to resume their lives.

In light of the recent repopulation, Loong’s photographs offer a rare and temporal insight into a world abandoned by man at the hands of nature.

They are strangely beautiful.