More than a decade since the March 2011 nuclear disaster, some registered residents of part of a Fukushima village made off-limits by high radiation levels can finally return home after the government decided Friday to lift evacuation orders on June 12.

A 0.95 square kilometer part of Katsurao, located near the defunct Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, will have its "difficult-to-return" zone classification lifted, the government's nuclear emergency response headquarters and the Reconstruction Agency agreed in a joint meeting.

File photo shows decontamination work in the village of Katsurao, Fukushima Prefecture, on Nov. 20, 2018. (Kyodo)

The move comes after national and local governments decided in May that the area's radiation decontamination and infrastructural developments had progressed enough to reopen.

The entirety of Katsurao became off-limits after the nuclear crisis triggered by an enormous earthquake and tsunami on March 11, 2011, with evacuation orders for most of the village lifted on June 12, 2016.

Of the 30 registered households and 82 residents in the relevant part of Katsurao, just four households totaling eight people have expressed an intention to return, according to the village government.

Currently, around 337 sq km of land in six municipalities of Fukushima Prefecture, including Katsurao, Okuma and Futaba, is still subject to the difficult-to-return zone classification.

At Friday's meeting, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said he intends to "move ahead with work to lift restrictions and further accelerate Fukushima's recovery."

Among the five other Fukushima municipalities inside the zone, Futaba and Okuma are set to have restrictions partially lifted from June onward, while the other three can expect partial removals in spring 2023.

However, more than 90 percent of the difficult-to-return zone in the prefecture will remain under the classification, and there is no concrete timetable for when it will be completely accessible again.