In Japan People Are Buying Bomb Shelters For Nuclear War (Thanks to North Korea)
Ryan Pickrell
Security, Asia
Japan is considering expanding the capabilities of its armed forces to permit attacks on North Korea in the event of a crisis. The country is also enhancing its missile defense systems
Japanese people are ordering specialized nuclear fallout shelters as North Korea continues to advance its nuclear and ballistic missile programs.
Oribe Seiki Seisakusho, a company in Western Japan, that builds shelters, has received eight orders this month, two more than its usual total for an entire year, Reuters reports. The company has also sold out of air purifiers designed to block radiation and poisonous gas, Nobuko Oribe, the company director, explained to reporters.
(This first appeared on The Daily Caller News Foundation site here.)
A nuclear fallout shelter costs $227,210, and the air purifiers cost between $5,630 and $15,440.
“It takes time and money to build a shelter. But all we hear these days, in this tense atmosphere, is that they want one now,” Oribe said. “They ask us to come right away and give them an estimate.” It reportedly takes four months to build a suitable shelter, which are built to withstand a Hiroshima-class nuclear explosion.
Earth Shift, a company in Shizuoka prefecture, has seen a tenfold increase in inquiries pertaining to underground shelters. The requests spiked in February, when North Korea tested a new road-mobile, solid-fueled mid-range ballistic missile.
The increased demand for nuclear fallout shelters and air purifiers is likely a response to North Korea’s regular missile launches, reports that the regime may conduct a sixth nuclear test in the near future, and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s claim that North Korea has the ability to launch missiles loaded with Sarin gas.
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