I know very well how wikipedia works. And I know what it looks like when something is broken. When the number of dead people from an earthquake gets pushed down to the point that it constitutes a minor point, something is broken. And no, this is not a conspiracy. It is perfectly sufficient that people, like you, publicly play down the importance of cities being destroyed and thousands of people being killed. Just as you do right here in your post.
Let me explain one thing: It does not matter if the towns are being rebuilt (in fact, they are not, because the areas are now designated as unfit for human habitation because they are threatened by tsunamies), you will not see thousands of people coming back from the sea, one by one, no matter what you rebuild and no matter how quickly you rebuild.
That's a vital concept right there: DEATH. It's sort of permanent. It does not have a half life. It does not get washed away by rainwater. (Unlike about one half the cesium, so far, that was released from the reactors.) It doesn't go away by decontamination. DEAD people are DEAD. They even have the nerve to STAY DEAD.
You may disagree with that. I'm sure your view will not be share by many other people.
And no, the brunt of the blame must not go to TEPCO, but to a society that has proven, time and again, to be incapable of planning for catastrophes. That is, to deal with earthquakes that only occur a few times per century in way that does not lead to thousands, tens of thousands or even over one hundred thousand deaths - such as the Tokyo earthquake 91 years ago.
And I'm NOT talking about building 15m high flood walls along the coast. I'm talking about simple measures such as making sure that designated evacuation areas will not get flooded even when a tsunami is higher than expected. It would have saved the lives of thousands of people. But it is obvious from the lack of such measures, that the society as a whole was incapable to even contemplate that possibility. TEPCO is to blame only insofar as it is one small part of this society that prefers to feign mere bravery instead of committing to true preperation in the face of disasters, that are sure to happen again and again.