Home » Posts tagged with » media (Page 403)
Nokia Play To adds DLNA streaming to waning Symbian (video)

Still rockin’ a Symbian phone from Nokia? Don’t let Android and WP7 owners hog all the media streaming fun. Nokia Play To brings DLNA’s push features to Symbian^3, albeit in beta form. Hit up the source link, install the app, and you’ll imbue your handset with the surprisingly rare ability to beam videos, photos, and music to any DLNA-capable receiving device jacked into your TV — heck, it could be your TV . Check out the video after the break if you want to see it in action before you click download. Continue reading Nokia Play To adds DLNA streaming to waning Symbian (video) Nokia Play To adds DLNA streaming to waning Symbian (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Jun 2011 03:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Continue reading …
160,000 asylum seekers granted amnesty by the backdoor, say MPs

Report says another 74,500 cases ‘cannot be traced’ while the immigration minister hails elimination of backlog from system An “amnesty” has been quietly granted to more than 160,000 asylum seekers over the past five years by a UK Border Agency that MPs have concluded is still “not fit for purpose”, in a damning report published on Thursday. The Commons home affairs select committee report says it is indefensible that officials have been unable to trace a further 74,500 asylum seekers, among a total of 450,000 unresolved “legacy” cases. The agency has been working through these cases since it was first declared not fit for purpose by then home secretary John Reid in 2006. The MPs say that fewer than one in 10 of those trapped in this historic backlog of asylum cases has actually been removed from the country but they add this should not be a surprise as some of the cases date back nearly 20 years. The cross-party committee regards what it describes as an “amnesty policy”, alongside renewed delays to the much heralded e-borders system to count people in and out of the country, as further evidence that the agency is still not proving effective. The report says that work has at last been concluded on 403,000 of the 450,000-strong backlog of cases. Just over 38,000, or 9%, had their claims rejected and have been removed from Britain. Just over 161,000, or 40%, were granted leave to remain and 74,500 have been “archived” because the applicants cannot be found and it is not known whether they are in the UK, have left the country or are dead. A further 129,000 cases are officially classified as “errors”. The MPs say the 161,000 granted leave to remain is such a large proportion that this amounts in practice to an amnesty. They also disclose that ministers have allowed agency caseworkers to grant permission to stay to applicants who have been in Britain for six to eight years, rather than the 10 to 12 years that applied at the start of the programme. They have also allowed cases involving people who could not be traced to be “parked in a controlled archive”. “We understand that ministers would have been unwilling to announce an amnesty for the applicants caught up in this backlog, not least because it might be interpreted as meaning that the UK was prepared more generally to relax its approach to migration; but we consider in practice an amnesty has taken place, at considerable cost to the taxpayer,” conclude the MPs. The confirmation of a backdoor amnesty is particularly damning, given that both Conservatives and Labour sharply attacked the Liberal Democrat leader, Nick Clegg, for promising a much less generous “earned route to citizenship” for irregular migrants who had been in Britain for 10 years, spoke English and had no criminal record. But the immigration minister, Damian Green, opening a new detention centre at Morton Hall, Lincolnshire denied there was an amnesty. “There’s absolutely no amnesty. What we’ve done is get through to the bottom of that huge problem we inherited. The main thing is we’ve now eliminated this backlog from the system so that we can get on with the everyday job that the previous government couldn’t because they had that backlog,” he said. The MPs say the backlog clearance will be completed within its original five-year target but that is only being achieved as a result of major redeployment of permanent staff and significant extra expenditure on temporary staff. The agency has yet to publish the cost of the programme. Meanwhile a backlog in new asylum applications is developing although its size is not yet clear, says the report. The MPs say it is understandable that fewer than one in 10 asylum seekers have been removed from Britain, as the longer a case is left the more likely it is that the asylum seeker will have married and had children and will be allowed to stay for family reasons. Keith Vaz, the committee’s chairman, said: “Though progress has been made, it is clear that the UK Border Agency is still not fit for purpose.” He said it was particularly worrying that the agency had been without a permanent head since Lin Homer moved to the Department of Transport five months ago. Labour’s immigration spokesman, Gerry Sutcliffe, said: “This is a scathing report … which illustrates the gap between what this government promised and what it is delivering. Following the government’s decision to cut over 5,000 staff from [the agency], we have repeatedly warned the Home Office that enforcement will suffer as a result. This report shows that managers and staff consistently say there are not sufficient resources to track and return illegal immigrants. “In addition, the report states that legacy asylum applications are increasingly being given permission to stay rather than the government seeking their removal. In the last few months there has been a significant decrease in the percentage of applicants and dependants sent home.” Jonathan Ellis, director of advocacy at the Refugee Council, said: “Too many asylum seekers have been left living in limbo without a decision on their case for too long, without any rights to play their part in British society. In those years, many will have settled down with families and made strong bonds with their local communities while it has been unsafe to return to their own countries, so granting permission to stay in the UK is in many cases the fairest, most humane thing to do. He said the agency “must now ensure another backlog does not accrue, and focus on making the right decisions first time round”. Immigration and asylum Damian Green Alan Travis guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Jon Stewart Reacts To Anthony Weiner Photo Scandal (VIDEO)

Jon Stewart is finding himself in a catch-22 this week. On one hand, the weekend brought about one of the most easily mockable stories to date. A Representative named Weiner allegedly tweeted a photo of his wiener? Now that’s the “sweet spot.” But on the other hand, the photo in question appears to belong to Stewart’s old college buddy Rep. Anthony Weiner. On Tuesday night’s show, Stewart responded to his friend’s unfortunate situation by coming to his defense. Well, sort of. Stewart actually insisted that Weiner’s wiener just doesn’t look like the one in the photo. “In real life, in my memory, this guy had a lot more ‘Anthony’ and a lot less ‘Weiner,’” Stewart said. “The only thing they have in common is that they both lean to the extreme left!” Watch the full segment below to hear Stewart’s entire “defense,” wherein he tries to pin something on the media but ends up going right back to the inside info he apparently has: “His d*ck’s just not that big. It can’t be.” WATCH:

Continue reading …
Live from D9: Nokia’s Stephen Elop takes the stage

We know, we know — you should’ve left the office hours ago, but if you hang tight for just a wee bit longer, you’ll be able to join us on our journey of the last D9 liveblog for June 1st, the year two-thousand and eleven. Hot on the heels of Steven Sinofsky and Leo Apotheker , it’s the president and CEO of Nokia, Mr. Stephen Elop. He’s been doing the media rounds while camped out in California today, and now it’s our turn to see how he reacts to Walt and Kara’s questioning. Live coverage of the interview continues after the break! Live from D9: Nokia’s Stephen Elop takes the stage originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 01 Jun 2011 19:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Continue reading …
Decriminalise possession of drugs, celebrities urge government

Campaign headed by actors, academics and lawyers says current drugs laws stigmatise people and damage communities Dame Judi Dench, Sir Richard Branson, and Sting have joined an ex-drugs minister and three former chief constables in calling for the decriminalisation of the possession of all drugs. The high-profile celebrities together with leading lawyers, academics, artists and politicians have signed an open letter to David Cameron to mark this week’s 40th anniversary of the 1971 Misuse of Drugs Act. The letter, published in a full-page advertisement in Thursday’s Guardian, calls for a “swift and transparent” review of the effectiveness of current drugs policies. Its signatories say that all the past 40 years has produced is a rapid growth in illicit drug use in Britain, and significant harm caused by the application of the criminal law to the personal use and possession of all drugs. “This policy is costly for taxpayers and damaging for communities,” they claim. “Criminalising people who use drugs leads to greater social exclusion and stigmatisation making it much more difficult for them to gain employment and to play a productive role in society. It creates a society full of wasted resources.” The letter launching the campaign, Drugs – It’s Time for Better Laws, has been organised by the national drugs charity Release. Other signatories include the film director Mike Leigh, actors Julie Christie and Kathy Burke and leading lawyer Sir Geoffrey Bindman QC. The former Labour drugs minister Bob Ainsworth and three former chief constables, Paul Whitehouse, Francis Wilkinson and Tom Lloyd, have all put their names to the letter. It points out that nearly 80,000 people were found guilty or cautioned for the possession of illegal drugs – most of whom were young, black or poor – in 2010. Over the past decade, more than a million people have ended up with a criminal record as a result of the drug laws. The letter coincides with Thursday’s New York launch of the report of the Global Commission on Drug Policy, which counts three former South American presidents, the former secretary-general of the United Nations Kofi Annan and Sir Richard Branson among its membership. “The war on drugs has failed to cut drug usage, but has filled our jails, cost millions in tax payer dollars, fuelled organised crime and caused thousands of deaths. We need a new approach, one that takes the power out of the hands of organised crime and treats people with addiction problems like patients, not criminals,” said Branson, founder of the Virgin Group, who is to appear at the launch. “The good news is new approaches focused on regulation and decriminalisation have worked. We need our leaders, including business people, looking at alternative, fact-based approaches. “We need more humane and effective ways to reduce the harm caused by drugs. The one thing we cannot afford to do is to go on pretending the ‘war on drugs’ is working.” Sting, who also signed the letter to Cameron, said: “Giving young people criminal records for minor drug possession serves little purpose – it is time to think of more imaginative ways of addressing drug use in our society.” Ainsworth, the former Home Office drugs minister and defence secretary, last December described the war on drugs as “nothing short of a disaster” and called for the legal regulation of their production and supply. The campaign defines decriminalisation as a model that adopts civil rather than criminal sanctions such as confiscation and warnings and fixed penalty fines rather than arrest, prosecution and a criminal record. The high-profile campaigners point to the Portuguese experience as evidence that decriminalisation does not lead to an increase in drug use. Portugal became the first European country in July 2001 to introduce “administrative” penalties – similar to parking fines – for the possession of all illicit drugs. The immediate reaction from the Home Office last night was to rule out any such move: “We have no intention of liberalising our drugs laws. Drugs are illegal because they are harmful – they destroy lives and cause untold misery to families and communities. “Those caught in the cycle of dependency must be supported to live drug-free lives, but giving people a green light to possess drugs through decriminalisation is clearly not the answer,” said a spokesman. “We are taking action through tough enforcement, both inland and abroad, alongside introducing temporary banning powers and robust treatment programmes that lead people into drug free recovery.” Drugs policy Drugs Drugs trade Crime Health Alan Travis guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

Andrew Breitbart isn’t the only right-winger out there creating false narratives about his targets through selective editing — indeed, this is a common practice at Fox News, too. But the real champion of selective editing — in quite a different fashion — is Matt Drudge. Instead of chopping up video, Drudge selectively edits tidbits of information from around the country to create narratives on his widely read Drudge Report website — narratives that, in fact, are often right-wing lies pandering to right-wing audiences. Recently, the narrative at Drudge has been this: Criminal young black men, freed to wanton abandon by the Black Panther-coddling Obama administration, are embarking on a retributive crime wave against white people. Alex Pareene at Salon calls him out : Since Obama actually took office, though, Drudge has seriously stepped up his “scary black people” coverage. There was, in September of 2009, the story he heavily publicized of a kid on a bus in Illinois getting beaten up. A kid on a bus in Illinois getting beaten up is not really national news — until Drudge makes it so. The fact that the beater was black and the victim white is why Drudge made it national news. Rush Limbaugh made the subtext explicit: “In Obama’s America, the white kids now get beat up with the black kids cheering.” This is the narrative that Drudge is trying to create, especially on slow news weekends when there’s nothing real to aggregate and post: The blacks are rising up and attacking the whites. If that sounds a bit crazy, in a Charles Manson way, then you’re obviously not paying attention. Black people are angry and they’re taking over! When Barack Obama was campaigning to win Chicago the Olympic games, Matt Drudge led with a terrifying photo of (black) gang violence and the breathless, all-caps headline, “OLYMPIC SPIRIT.” The violent death of a young man is definitely news … in Chicago, where it happened. It had very little to do with whether Chicago is a suitable venue for the Olympics. Violent murders happen in big cities and small towns across the nation every day. But only some of them can be used to stoke paranoia about emboldened, angry black people rising up. John at Gawker observes that this past weekend, there were 10 Drudge headlines supporting this narrative: Then be sure to check in with the Drudge Report, which has conveniently rounded up a slew of run-of-the-mill summer crime stories that happen to involve black people and suggestively weaved them into a nationwide race riot. … The race-baiting is a bit more transparent—”urban,” “rib fest”—than we’ve come to expect from Drudge, who is usually more elegant in his efforts to stoke white rage. All of Drudge’s readers in the media business, the cable news producers and Politico reporters who regard him as “America’s assignment editor,” know exactly what his intent is with those headlines. But instead of being dismissed as a racist weather-obsessed recluse he continues to be regarded as a power player in right-wing politics. Unsurprisingly, some of the wingnutosphere’s duller tools in the shed promptly leapt to Drudge’s defense by trotting out the classic right-wing stereotypes about blacks and crime — thereby clinching the case that what Drudge was doing was stirring up these resentments. F’r instance, Confederate Yankee : Pareene is a far left liberal that would like to embrace the childish fiction that all races and cultures are essentially the same. It’s a wonderful view to have when you’re ten. While individuals within these cultures can be anyone and achieve anything, it is a statistical fact that African-Americans are disproportionately responsible for crimes in this nation compared to any other ethnic group. They are also more likely to commit some of the more sensational crimes, such as the near riots and wildings that are the prime headline fodder that are Drudge’s bread and butter. If Pareene really wanted to make an impact, he’d spend his time and resources trying to find the reason for the statistical discrepancy that shows African-Americans are more prone to be criminals and victims of violent crime. Of course, he already knows the reason. It started with LBJ’s “Great Society,” and continued with the rise of Planned Parenthood and the destruction of the African-American family unit due to “progressive” social reforms. Oy. The stooooooopid, it burns. And then these same conservatives look hurt and amazed when people point out that their attitudes are deeply racist. Right-wingers like Jim Hoft never seem to understand that the correlation of crime with race is not a causal relationship — rather, the causal relationship is between poverty and crime. And black people are more likely to be impoverished in America than other races for a broad variety of reasons, many of them historical in nature, but including a number of ongoing factors: demographic segregation, job discrimination, and impoverishment of urban schools. There are many theories about race and crime in America — some of them promoted by white supremacists such as Jared Taylor and David Duke . As Amanda Marcotte at Pandagon observes: Drudge’s choice of what stories to highlight is about creating a narrative, and the insinuation is now that we have a black President, all hell is breaking loose. One of the weirdest, most long-standing conservative myths is that black people are aching to “rise up” and take the nation by force. The argument is then that they have to, more in sorrow than in glee, argue against equal rights for black people. They’d want to share, but you know, violence! The notion that black America is revenge-minded is something that is surprisingly powerful for wingnuts. That’s why there’s non-stop chatter on right wing radio about slavery reparations, even though the subject has no traction in real world discourse, and even if it did, said reparations would look much different than right wingers imagine it would like. (They’re picturing jack-booted thugs stealing your grandmother’s pearls and giving it to some family you don’t know to pawn, but it would more likely be a check that resembles a Social Security check or a tax refund.) And that’s why Andrew Breitbart thinks that some court settlement to black farmers who were systemically discriminated against for decades is the biggest problem our nation faces. Indeed, Drudge’s editorial choices tell us far more about him — and his many fans — than anything else.

Continue reading …
Conflicting Reports Over Death Of Katya Koren, 19-Year-Old Muslim Beauty Queen, Emerge

Ukrainian officials have slammed media claims that a teenage beauty queen was stoned to death by three Muslim suspects who alleged the 19-year-old violated Sharia law by participating in pageants. As CBS reports, the body of Katya Koren was found in a forest near her home in the Crimea region of Ukraine one week after her disappearance. Her battered body had been partially buried. Initial media reports said three Muslim youths were responsible for the murder, claiming Koren’s death had been justified under Islam, the Daily Mail is reporting. One of the three suspects, named as 16-year-old Bihal Gaziev, was quoted as telling police that Katya had “violated the laws of Sharia,” and that he has no regrets about her death. Now, Mejlis of the Crimean Tatar People Chairman Mustafa Abdülcemil Qırımoğlu, commonly known as Mustafa Cemiloğlu in Turkey, said the detained teenager, who is of Crimean Tatar descent, was pressured by police into accepting the blame for the murder. “The killing was covered in a distorted way, as if it was a religiously motivated murder, by the media around the world,” he is quoted as saying. Though initial reports claimed Koren, like her assailants, was Muslim, officials like Qırımoğlu now say she is actually Christian with Russian roots. “The girl was not Muslim. All these [reports] are a provocation and fabricated news.” Other authorities now believe Koren may have been killed by a psychologically troubled classmate, who robbed and possibly raped her before battering her to death with a rock. “A student did it, killing his classmate,” Sergei Reznikov, a senior policeman involved in the case, is quoted by the Telegraph as saying. “There is no other underlying reason, neither religious nor linked with inter-ethnic conflicts.” Friends have described Koren, who reportedly finished seventh in a regional beauty contest, as liking fashionable clothes. Though the Crimea region is home to more than 250,000 Muslim Crimean Tatars, cases of Sharia punishment being meted out by stoning have thus far been unheard of.

Continue reading …
Care home abuse: ministers move to restore confidence

Following Panorama investigation, coalition announces ‘guarantee’ residents will be found alternative accommodation Downing Street moved to prevent a collapse in public confidence in the care of Britain’s most vulnerable citizens amid fears over the solvency of the country’s biggest residential home operator for the elderly and widespread horror at revelations of abuse in a private facility for people with learning disabilities. Ministers abandoned insistence that these were local issues by announcing a “guarantee” that 31,000 elderly residents of the care home chain Southern Cross would be found alternative accommodation if the company went under. The prime minister’s official spokesman said Downing Street was in touch with Southern Cross. “Our role is to ensure we keep in close contact with what is going on, and keep monitoring the situation, and we will do what we can to ensure there is protection for anyone affected by this.” The move amounted to an effective repudiation of the government’s commitment to localism. Local authority leaders, who had been told that the Southern Cross problem was a contractual issue for them to resolve, were unaware of the nature of the guarantee, but they issued their own assurance that all the company’s residents – including those who pay their own care fees – would be looked after. Meanwhile, Downing Street has demanded a full report following the disclosure by the BBC Panorama programme of systematic abuse at a unit for people with learning disabilities near Bristol run by the Castlebeck company, a firm ultimately owned by Irish tycoons JP McManus, John Magnier and Dermot Desmond. The Department of Health had been insisting behind the scenes that it was an issue purely for the Care Quality Commission (CQC), the care sector regulator, and the local authorities and NHS primary care trusts that paid the £3,500-a-week fees for the young adults they referred there. But the health department found itself obliged to step in. No 10 has asked for a detailed account of what the various agencies knew and did about the regime at the unit. The CQC, which failed to follow up tip-offs from a whistleblower who then contacted Panorama, has admitted its mistakes were “unforgivable”. For ministers there were unnerving signs that controversy over social care was seamlessly taking over from controversy over the government’s becalmed NHS reforms, now that its “listening exercise” on complaints about the reforms has concluded pending a report. The clear link between the two in the public eye is that the NHS plans include outsourcing NHS care to “any qualified provider”. Stephen Dorrell, the chair of the Commons health select committee who has voiced doubts about some aspects of the government’s NHS plans, outlined arrangements for a wide-ranging inquiry by his committee in the autumn. Dorrell, a former Tory health secretary, said the inquiry would look broadly at the process of commissioning care and support for vulnerable adults, following a report due next month from a government commission on the funding of social care, led by the economist Andrew Dilnot. “The questions will be about how can these stories of abuse arise,” Dorrell said. “There was Panorama yesterday, but also the report last week on care of the elderly in NHS hospitals, all the issues around Southern Cross and the CQC in particular. “We are talking about 70% of patient load of the health service, that is people with long-term needs and conditions, and so often we focus on waiting times for elective operations. This is a far bigger issue.” Referring to the Castlebeck case, Dorrell added: “Someone had to sign the cheque that the care home operator was being paid to provide a service of £3,000 per week. I presume the majority of those cases were paid for with public funds. The people who signed the cheque have a duty to make certain that standards are of an adequate nature.” Long-term care Social care Disability Health Health policy Liberal-Conservative coalition David Brindle Polly Curtis guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Gov. Chris Christie’s ‘CopterGate’: Uses State Police helicopter to see his son play high-school baseball

Click here to view this media Christie’s CopterGate is now upon us. Gov. Chris Christie arrived at his son’s baseball game this afternoon aboard a State Police helicopter. Right before the lineup cards were being exchanged on the field, a noise from above distracted the spectators as the 55-foot long helicopter buzzed over trees in left field, circled the outfield and landed in an adjacent football field. Christie disembarked from the helicopter and got into a black car with tinted windows that drove him about a 100 yards to the baseball field. During the 5th inning, Christie and First Lady Mary Pat Christie got into the car, rode back to the helicopter and left the game. During a pitching change, play was stopped for a couple of minutes while the helicopter took off. {} Christie was ferried to the field in a brand-new AugustaWestland helicopter, purchased at a cost to taxpayers of $12.5 million. The State Police has received two of the five helicopters purchased so far, according to testimony from Attorney General Paula Dow during a May budget hearing. They were purchased to replace aging Sikorsky helicopters that the State Police have flown for about two decades. The helicopters, which can reach nearly 200 miles per hour with its twin turbo-shaft engines, are designed for homeland security duties and transporting critically injured patients. So the much-touted “fiscal conservative” uses a state helicopter designed for homeland security duties and transporting critically injured patients. Does going to see his soon play ball meet those strict requirements or is it an abuse of power? Murshed reminded me of this Nancy Pelosi smear job by Hannity over flying: Hannity, Gingrich falsely suggested that Pelosi made unprecedented use of military plane — but “practice began with Speaker Hastert” And as TPM reports, Chris Christie: No. 1 U.S. Attorney In Wasting Gov’t Travel Money Voters just don’t like governors using helicopters. It helped destroy Frank Murkowski’s run in Alaska. We’ll see how upset NJ resident are about this.

Continue reading …
Fukushima effect: Japan schools take health precautions in radiation zone

Schools located near the nuclear plant have removed and buried the topsoil from playgrounds amid concern over the risk to pupils At first sight, there seems little out of the ordinary on this wet afternoon for the pupils of Oyama primary school. They wave from classroom windows as they rush to finish the day’s cleaning chores; outside, the wind and rain sends the school’s pet rabbits into a retreat deep inside their hutches. But buried beneath the surface of the school playing field is evidence that life in this village, about 40 miles from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, is far from normal: a large quantity of radioactive soil, wrapped in tarpaulin. Health concerns for the school’s 225 pupils, aged between six and 12, centre on the radioactive isotopes released by the plant, whose operator has been criticised for failing to prepare for the 11 March tsunami. In a preliminary report released on Wednesday, inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency said Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco) had underestimated the risk of the giant tsunami, although they praised the plant workers’ post-disaster response. “The tsunami hazard for several sites was underestimated,” the report said. “Nuclear plant designers and operators should appropriately evaluate and provide protection against the risks of all natural hazards.” The inspectors also urged authorities to closely monitor the health of plant workers and members of the public, including thousands of vulnerable children. In April, Japan’s government sparked anger when it raised the upper limit of safe radiation exposure for children from 1 millisievert (mSv) a year to 20mSv a year, the same level the International Commission on Radiological Protection recommends for nuclear plant workers. The decision prompted Toshiso Kosako, a Tokyo university professor, to tearfully announce his resignation as a government nuclear adviser, describing the revised upper limit as “intolerable”. Ignoring official assurances that the exposure limit and current radiation readings in the area pose no threat to children’s health, parents and teachers in Otama and five other communities in Fukushima prefecture started removing and burying topsoil from school playgrounds. At schools where mechanical diggers were in short supply, parents shovelled the soil themselves. The cleanup drew a dismissive response from Yukio Edano, the government’s chief spokesman. “Based on guidelines by the education and science ministries, there is no need for [soil] removal,” he said. But Oyama’s principal, Hiroyuki Ando, said parental pressure, and the fear of the possible effects of long-term exposure to contaminants in the soil, had left him with no choice. “We were worried about high radiation levels, particularly caesium in topsoil, so we consulted scientists and the local education authorities and removed the soil ourselves,” he said. The steps produced immediate results: radiation readings in topsoil outside Ando’s school dropped from 1.32 mSv to 0.25 mSv an hour, compared with a pre-disaster reading of 0.04 mSv. Under government standards, children should not play outdoors for more than one hour a day if radiation levels exceed 3.8 mSv an hour. “Even though the readings are better, they’re still much higher than they were before the accident. I don’t think we’ll ever be able to get back to those days,” said Ando, adding that pupils would have to take swimming lessons at a nearby sports centre this summer due to concern about possible contamination of the school’s outdoor pool. Last week the education ministry conducted a partial volte face, announcing it would aim to reduce the exposure limit for children at school to the previous 1 mSv a year. Officials also promised to foot the bill for the removal of topsoil from outdoor play areas in the region where levels exceed the limit. “We have taken the measure so children and their parents can feel relieved,” the education minister, Yoshiaki Takaki, told reporters.Many residents of Otama feel anything but relieved. The Fukushima effect is being felt throughout this picturesque village of 8,600, where the rice – farmers have all but given up hope that nervous consumers will buy this year’s crop – is considered among the best in Japan. “We are not in the least bit reassured by what the government tells us,” said Yuki Watabe, as she and her son arrived at the supermarket wearing surgical masks. “I wear this when I go out and wash fruit and vegetables thoroughly. I don’t hang the laundry outside to dry and the children have to play indoors for the time being.” Others accuse their neighbours of over-reacting. “I don’t think it was necessary to remove the soil,” said Miwa Takeda, as she waited outside the school for her nine-year-old daughter. “Radiation levels haven’t exceeded the daily limit, so why bother? My husband worked at the Fukushima Daini plant until the day after the tsunami and he hasn’t bothered undergoing a radiation check. We eat the local vegetables and our kids play outside for as long as they like.” Ando says that data proving radiation levels are safe does little to counter public unease about the future. “Most of the parents here were adamant that we did this, even though the government keeps saying there is no risk. You don’t know what effects radiation will have 10 or 20 years down the line. It’s not just about safety, but about reassuring people.” Schools throughout Fukushima prefecture are stepping up their response to the accident in the absence, they say, of satisfactory information from Tepco and the government. On Wednesday, when most Japanese children changed into light summer uniforms, schools in Fukushima asked pupils to stay wrapped up in their winter clothes to reduce their exposure to atmospheric radiation. Dosimeters to monitor radiation in pupils have been distributed to teachers at more than 1,600 kindergartens and schools in the prefecture. One school in Koriyama city, 37 miles from the nuclear plant, publishes regular radiation updates on its website, which receives 4,000 hits a day. As they count the cost of the disaster in anxiety and possible damage to the local economy, Fukushima’s infamy weighs heavy on the people whose home has become synonymous with radiation. “To be mentioned in the same breath as Chernobyl is a source of great pain for us,” Ando said. “It is all very well the government telling us that we’re over-reacting, but this is where we live. This is where our children go to school.” Japan disaster Japan Nuclear power Energy Natural disasters and extreme weather Health Schools Justin McCurry guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …