An anti-nuclear protest Japanese style as campaigners take to the streets ahead of the country's first national election since the Fukushima disaster.<br/> <br />The protest included the leader of the newly-formed Tomorrow Party, Yukiko Kada, a governor in Western Japan and a former environmental sociology professor.<br/> <br />Her party wants to shut down all nuclear reactors within 10 years - much sooner than the ruling Democratic Party's goal to phase out nuclear power by the 2030s.<br/> <br />With polls showing the pro-nuclear energy Liberal Democratic Party on track for victory in Sunday's election, Kada urged protesters not to forget the double disaster that hit Japan in 2011.<br/> <br />"Let's get angry", she says. "We have to have the LDP reflect on what they've done and apologize to the children, forest, and land of Fukushima. Who's taken responsibility?"<br/> <br />Protesters also marched in front of the headquarters of the Fukushima Daichi plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Company - who many blame for the disaster.<br/> <br />Three reactors melted down at the plant following the devastating tsunami of March, 2011, causing the worst radiological disaster since Chernobyl in 1986.
