Boy, this just gets better and better, doesn’t it? So those reports of very high radioactive leaks, the ones TEPCO denied, were accurate if the reactor core was exposed. There was indeed a nuclear meltdown: Tokyo Electric Power Company says the No.1 reactor at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant is believed to be in a state of “meltdown”. The utility company said on Thursday that most of the fuel rods are likely to have melted and fallen to the bottom of the reactor . Earlier in the day, it found that the coolant water in the reactor is at a level which would completely expose nuclear fuel rods if they were in their normal position. The company believes the melted fuel has cooled down, judging from the reactor’s surface temperature. But it suspects the meltdown created a hole or holes in the bottom of the reacto r causing water to leak into the containment vessel. It also suspects the water is leaking into the reactor building. But don’t worry – even thought it’s reached Level 7, it’s “still not as bad as Chernobyl”!
Continue reading …Peers describe David Cameron’s intervention in case – after Kate McCann’s open letter to Sun – as PR exercise Two peers who are members of police watchdogs warned that the independence of the Metropolitan police was under threat after the prime minister brought in Scotland Yard to review the disappearance of Madeleine McCann. Insiders at the Yard played down any suggestions that their role could quickly lead to any breakthrough in the case, saying that the review, which will cost millions of pounds, could take months or even years. Labour’s Lord Harris, a member of the Metropolitan Police Authority, accused David Cameron of bowing to Rupert Murdoch’s empire, referring to Cameron’s decision to call in Scotland Yard after Kate McCann wrote an open letter in the Sun asking for his help. Lord Bradshaw, the Liberal Democrat peer and vice-chairman of Thames Valley Police Authority, added his voice to the criticism, describing the prime minister’s intervention as a PR exercise. “I am mightily worried about the politicisation of the police force. What appears on the face of it to be fairly innocuous orders – it’s a fairly short step from there to telling the police they have got to investigate this rather than that,” Bradshaw said. Harris said: “This … is entirely predictable in terms of the ‘pulling power’ of News International on Government policy … However, his [Cameron's] intervention drives a coach and horses through the draft protocol issued by the Home Office designed to preserve the operational independence of the police.” Writing on his blog , the peer added: “I can imagine that the senior leadership of the Metropolitan police are not exactly happy about this. It again embroils their officers in a high-profile investigation, where the chances of success are unclear, and which will divert limited investigative resources away from other matters.” In a statement Scotland Yard denied it had been ordered to review the abduction. It said that the commissioner, Sir Paul Stephenson, received a request which he considered and decided on balance that it was the best course to take. Kerry Needham, the mother of Ben Needham, the British toddler who was abducted on Crete 20 years ago, said: “I am pleased for the McCann family and look forward to the government offering the same support to all the families with children missing abroad.” If the Yard is given access to all the Portuguese documentation the first task will be to have it translated. As part of the review the Met’s team – likely to be led by a detective chief inspector within the homicide command – will also examine files held by Leicestershire police, the McCanns’ home force, who gave some help to the Portuguese officers. There is also documentation from a number of private investigators hired by the McCanns over the last four years. Although there was irritation among senior figures at Scotland Yard at being bounced into an inquiry, one source predicted that it would be quickly overtaken by a desire to do the best job possible. “It was political. But at the end of the day a child is missing.” The Met has a copy of a review into Madeleine’s disappearance completed by Jim Gamble, when he was head of Ceop, the child exploitation and online protection centre. It is understood to recommend that Scotland Yard be brought in to work with the Portuguese police on a review, but his report has been sitting on the home secretary’s desk for more than a year until this week with no action taken. Scotland Yard released the letter to Sir Paul from Theresa May on Thursday. In it the home secretary says diplomatic contact has been made with the Portuguese police, who have indicated they would co-operate with Scotland Yard. But she made clear it would be down to the Yard to negotiate the details. The McCanns repeated their thanks to Cameron, saying the Met’s involvement was a positive step. Madeleine McCann David Cameron Metropolitan police Police The Sun Sandra Laville guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Trainee Pakistan soldiers killed after graduation party • Two suicide bombers launch separate attacks within minutes When Osama bin Laden’s Pakistani supporters strike back, this is what it looks like: twisted metal, scattered suitcases and body parts; blood and savagery. The Taliban said the vicious double suicide bombing in Shabqadar, a trading town on the edge of the tribal belt in Charsadda district in north-western Pakistan, claimed the first part of the blood price they had promised to extract for the American killing of Bin Laden on 2 May. It was conducted with ruthless efficiency. Abid Khan, 24, cowered in his sweetshop when he heard the first blast and then, eight minutes later, a second. Rushing to the scene, he found some 200 trainee soldiers strewn on the road among mangled vans and a pile of bags. “It was very bad,” he said in slow, precise English. “Some people had no hand. Some people had no foot. Some heads were far away [from] the people.” He repeated himself. “It was very bad.” The dead and injured had been among 800 trainee soldiers partying just hours earlier with songs and music, having graduated into the ranks of the Frontier Corps, a poorly equipped paramilitary force drawn from the tribes of north-western Pakistan. They had just completed a six-month training course at the FC’s main training academy in Shabqadar – a British-era base with sweeping lawns and tree-lined drives – and came from districts that read like a roll-call of Taliban battlegrounds: Waziristan, Swat, Kohat, Lakki Marwat. But they barely made it out of the gate. As the young cadets left the base at 6am, clambering into buses and piling their luggage on top, a suicide bomber approached on foot then exploded his payload. More trainees rushed out to help the wounded. But eight minutes later a second bomber turned up, on a motorbike, exploding a vicious hail of ballbearings that sliced through shops, buses and flesh. By evening the death toll had reached 80, of whom 66 were FC recruits, with another 120 injured. The toll, as ever, was expected to rise. US officials are hoping to leverage outrage over Bin Laden to gain concessions from the Pakistani army. They want the military to push into Waziristan, to sever relations with militant groups such as the Haqqani network, and to arrest high-level fugitives thought to be still inside Pakistan, mostly notably Bin Laden’s deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri, and the Taliban leader, Mullah Omar. Perhaps underscoring the drive, a CIA drone fired a missile at a car in North Waziristan, killing three people in the third such attack since Bin Laden’s death. The US embassy in Islamabad did not comment, but it did issue a statement condemning the Shabqadar attack as the work of the “true enemy of the people of Pakistan”. It’s still unclear whether the army, a past master at managing the tricky US relationship, will accede to any or all of Washington’s demands. But it is sensitive to an unprecedented wave of criticism in Islamabad, where the top brass made a rare address to parliament. The army chief, General Ashfaq Kayani, the chief of Pakistan’s Inter-Service Intelligence (ISI), General Ahmad Shuja Pasha, and at least three other top generals fielded questions from parliamentarians late into the evening in a session that was closed to the public. But some details leaked out – most intriguingly a claim by the country’s air chief that Shamsi airbase in Balochistan, used by the CIA to carry out drone attacks, is actually under the jurisdiction of the United Arab Emirates. But in Shabqadar, just a two-hour drive away, the repercussions of Bin Laden’s death — what one local termed the “Osama drama” – had a very real impact. The town centre was deserted, shuttered by police as the authorities cleaned up the blast site. A dozen Hiace mini-vans, crushed like tin cans, clustered outside the gates of the base. Blood-soaked rags littered the pavement. A policemen emerged from the wreckage with a fistful of ballbearings. “We are not afraid of the situation,” he said, a little unsteadily. “Everything is for Allah.” Hundreds of tiny holes pitted the shopfront behind him. A few provincial ministers came up from Peshawar, 30 miles to the south, offering soundbites for the cameras then departing in a whirl of flashing lights, horns and armoured cars. The scene was a reminder that, behind the spy games and hushed diplomatic shuffle, it is ordinary Pakistanis who have paid the price for their country’s part in the fight against militancy. Some 30,000 Pakistanis have died violently in the past decade, including 9,000 from the armed forces, according to official figures – 10 times the death toll in the US on 9/11. Commando instructor Gul Zaman, a burly man with a stone face, stood outside the crumbled barriers of the FC base, mourning his students. “They were all just young boys,” he said quietly. “Not one was over 25 years old.” A Taliban spokesman said the atrocity was the first revenge for the “martyrdom” of Bin Laden. “There will be more,” Ehsanullah Ehsan told Reuters. But senior police officials believe the bombing was more connected to the war in nearby Mohmand tribal agency, which starts just three miles from Shabqadar. Pakistan’s army has been fighting the Pakistani Taliban there for more than two years, as part of a series of rolling battles across the tribal belt. The fight is vicious. In December a Taliban suicide bomber killed at least 50 people at a public meeting; this week they assassinated one pro-government militiaman and kidnapped another. On Thursday a stray shell landed on a house in Mohmand, killing one person and wounding a woman and two children. People in Shabqadar can hear the artillery. But the suicide bombings were also a challenge to Pakistani politicians who want to spurn western assistance. A half-shredded poster at the blast site carried the image of Imran Khan, the cricketer turned politician who once advocated talks with the Taliban. His supporters, including many women, protested outside parliament as the generals spoke, carrying posters that read “What are you hiding?” The message echoed widespread skepticism among Pakistanis who, despite the blasts, continue to believe in astonishing numbers that the death of Bin Laden was concocted. “It was all just a drama. Osama wasn’t really there,” said taxi driver Hakimullah Jan in Shabqadar. “The Pakistani army and the Americans are just players in this Osama drama.” Caught between army hawks, a disbelieving public and an angry America, others simply feel beleaguered, as if their country has nowhere to turn. “So we are doomed if we side with militants and doomed if we don’t,” tweeted @ghamidiview, a follower of the moderate Islamic scholar Javed Ghamidi. As evening fell in Shabqadar, a small group of staff emerged from the base, which was still shuttered, to gather up the luggage in the street. One by one, they unrolled the dead soldiers’ belongings – bundles of bedding wrapped round piles of neatly folded, military jumpers. Then they quietly rolled them up again, and carried them back into the base. Pakistan Taliban Afghanistan Global terrorism al-Qaida Osama bin Laden Declan Walsh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …] C&L’s donation drive is coming to an end soon until after the summer and I hope if you can help us out as we move forward. I’ll be bringing on another Editor and I’m planning fellowship grants for some other very deserving writers to join the team. For Snail Mail: Crooksandliars.com P.O. Box 66310 Los Angeles, CA 90066 Our newest plans also include upgrading the coming mobile site and switching our video formats to work on mobile devices, plus the long process of re-encoding all our old videos for embed purposes. Won’t you please throw us a few bucks if you can? For all those that have contributed, thank you so much. You guys rock!
Continue reading …Navy will not get fleet of US joint strike fighters until 2023, three years after carrier due to enter service The Ministry of Defence has still not decided how many planes should be assigned to the navy’s long-delayed and increasingly expensive aircraft carrier programme but whatever the number they will not be available for more than a decade, it has emerged. Confusion over the carrier project was compounded on Friday when the MoD said in its “business plan” that the navy will not get its fleet of US joint strike fighters (JSFs) until 2023, three years after HMS Prince of Wales, the carrier to be equipped with the aircraft, is due to enter service. The government decided under last year’s strategic defence review, to switch from a short takeoff and landing version of the JSF aircraft to one that lands and takes off by catapult and arrester wires – “cats and traps”. Defence officials denied yesterday that there was any delay in the project and that the Prince of Wales would get 12 of the planes by 2020. However, they said just how many of the aircraft the navy – and the RAF – would be provided had yet to be agreed. “We do not talk about specific numbers”, an official said. The MoD originally planned to buy more than 130 of the fighters, a figure which will be drastically reduced. Though the JSF “carrier variant” is cheaper than the model originally chosen by the navy, their costs have soared to about £100m each. It emerged last month that the cost of the carriers had also risen and could amount to £7bn, partly the result of the decision to redesign the Prince of Wales. The first carrier , HMS Queen Elizabeth, will be mothballed when it is completed so that Britain will be without a carrier able to take any aircraft for 10 years. Admiral Sir Mark Stanhope, the first sea lord, told MPs this week that the navy faced a major challenge in building up a force of fighter jets to equip the new aircraft carrier. In evidence to the Commons defence committee he said he wished he could revisit the government’s last-minute decision in the defence review to scrap the Ark Royal and its Harrier jumpjets. He said that if the navy still had a carrier it would be deployed on the operations in Libya. “If we had a carrier it would be there”. Stanhope said the decision to scrap the Ark Royal before the Prince of Wales was ready in 2020 could limit Britain’s ability to provide air support for British forces. He said that could leave the UK without a carrier for around three out of every eight years due to the need for periodic refits. Jim Murphy, the shadow defence secretary, said that Stanhope’s comments and those of the head of the army and airforce “blow a hole in the government’s arguments over their rushed defence review”. He added: “Ministers have consistently said that decisions made in the review do not hinder our services but now we have service heads saying that an aircraft carrier would be used in Libya and that our forces are stretched”. The RAF said yesterday that its armed pilotless drones used in operations in Afghanistan and controlled from a US base in Nevada will for the first time be controlled from the UK. Some 40 RAF personnel will be based at RAF Waddington in Lincolnshire. At a cost of £125m, the RAF is to double its fleet of five Reaper drones now operating over Afghanistan. Military Defence policy Richard Norton-Taylor guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Governments claims video shows attack by Nato killed11 imams and 45 wounded Muslim holy men The Libyan government has shown video of what it claims to be an attack on a guest house in the city of Al-Brega in eastern Libya where dozens of Islamic imams or sheikhs were staying as part of a peace march to the east. The gruesome images showed 11 dead imams and 45 wounded Muslim holy men – five of them in a coma – according to Libyan government officials speaking in the courtyard of a Tripoli mosque where Islamic elders and Christian Coptic priests had gathered to condemn the attack. The carnage was allegedly caused by a Nato strike in the early hours of Friday. Government spokesman Moussa Ibrahim said: “We will never accept from Nato that this was an accident. This barbaric, inhumane attack took place in the early hours. “The imams had travelled to call for brothers in the east of the country to join them in peace. “They were staying in a small guest house in the city of Brega to rest before moving on to Ajdabiya, and then hopefully Benghazi. “Is this legal under any Security Council resolution, to kill people while they sleep just awhile before they were praying for peace?” Nato was due to respond to the claim this evening at a press conference in Brussels, but did not take the opportunity to make a statement about the bombing. Muammar Gaddafi has meanwhile said in an audio recording, broadcast on state television, that he was in a place where Nato cannot reach and kill him. “I am telling the coward crusaders that I am at a place you cannot reach and kill me,” he said in the recording broadcast on al-Jamahiriya television. Nato bombed Gaddafi’s Bab al-Aziziyah compound in Tripoli on Thursday. Earlier, the Libyan government strongly rejected a claim by Italian foreign minister Franco Frattini that Gaddafi was injured in a recent strike and is no longer in the capital. Muammar Gaddafi Libya Middle East Africa Martin Chulov guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media I just have to ask, now that it looks like there’s going to be a criminal investigation against John Ensign after the Senate ethics committee released their findings this week: When is that same panel going to investigate Tom Coburn further and take some action against him and his part in covering up the crimes committed by John Ensign? Here’s the entire segment from Maddow’s show where she laid out the entire scandal better than I’ve seen anyone else in our corporate media do with all of the ugly details explained fully. If you’ve got almost twenty minutes to spare and want to know what our press has largely been ignoring for the last couple of years that should have had Ensign thrown out of the Senate some time ago IMO, Rachel did a great job of explaining it here. And here’s more from the HuffPo on Coburn’s role in the cover-up — Tom Coburn Helped Cover Up John Ensign Affair: Senate Ethics Report : Sen. Tom Coburn played a more active role than previously known in the negotiations between ex-Sen. John Ensign (R-Nev.) and his former aide, Doug Hampton. The extent of the Oklahoma Republican’s involvement is made clear in a report released Thursday by the Senate Ethics Committee that accuses the former senator of serious criminal violations . Coburn, a friend of Ensign’s who confronted him about the adultery, became involved as an intermediary in negotiations between Ensign and Doug Hampton. The former aide sought money from Ensign in spring 2009. Coburn negotiated the payment to Doug Hampton down from $8 million to about $2.8 million, according to the report. The Oklahoma Republican’s involvement in the cover-up of the affair could lead to uncomfortable questions for the senator and his party going forward. While Ensign left the Senate hastily last week, Coburn remains an active figure. Coburn denied that he served as a negotiator when he testified for the report, but acknowledged he spoke to Hampton’s attorney, Albregts, in May 2009. The Oklahoma Republican told the Ethics Committee that he was simply planning to pass along information to Ensign. I’m sure he just thought it was the “good Christian thing to do” for his friend. Nothing to see here folks, so just move along now. This hypocrite needs to be investigated just like his buddy Ensign was, but given it took them almost two years to even go after Ensign and the Senate ethics committee’s track record, I don’t hold out much hope they’ll hold Coburn accountable. And don’t even get me started on the DOJ that was going to give Ensign a pass before this happened and the ethics panel referred the case back to them. Apparently the rule of law in this country only applies if you’re a working-class stiff who’s not politically connected.
Continue reading …China’s dinosaur excavations began in the 60s and more than 50 tonnes of fossils have emerged from 30 sites around Zhucheng
Continue reading …Mamata Banerjee wins crushing victory over communists in West Bengal, while Jayalalithaa triumphs in Tamil Nadu Mamata Banerjee spent Friday morning listening to classical music while finishing an oil painting. By the evening she was in charge of state with a population of 90 million, after winning a crushing victory over the Indian Communist party and putting an end to three decades of leftwing rule in West Bengal. Her victory came as results from a string of state elections across India consolidated female politicians in some of the country’s most prominent positions. In the vast southern state of Tamil Nadu, Jayalalithaa, a former movie star who goes by one name, swept aside the incumbent government in an acrimonious fight fuelled by corruption allegations. Ramachandra Guha, a political historian and analyst, said the results were unprecedented. “You don’t want to go too far as huge problems of gender inequality, foeticide, oppression and discrimination against women remain in India but it is still exceptional to have so many very powerful women at one time,” Guha said. Sonia Gandhi, the president of the Congress party, remains the most influential single politician in the country. Other prominent female politicians include Sheila Dikshit, the chief minister of the capital, Delhi, and Mayawati, who runs the vast state of Uttar Pradesh. The president of India, a largely ceremonial position, is also a woman, Pratibha Patil. The victory of Banerjee’s All India Trinamool Congress had been widely predicted. The Communist party in West Bengal has seen its once powerful support base weakened by corruption, poor administration, a series of land protests and a failure to bring any serious economic growth. Vinod Mehta, editor of Outlook news magazine, said the party had lost power because of “more than three decades of misgovernment and dogma”. Banerjee said hers was a victory “of hapless people who have faced exploitation, violence and discrimination”. But some analysts have reservations about her ability to deal with the problems facing West Bengal, where poverty in many areas is equal to that in sub-Saharan Africa. Elsewhere in India, about 142 million people’s votes were counted in four states and one city, Puducherry. More than 800 counting stations were set up, protected by nearly 20,000 security personnel. In the southern coastal state of Kerala, communists also lost – though by a slim margin – to the Congress party, who lead a governing coalition at national level. But in Tamil Nadu, the governing party’s local allies were ousted in what is seen as a win for anti-corruption campaigners. The DMK party was deeply implicated in the biggest graft scandal to hit India for decades: the allegedly fraudulent sale of telecoms licences which has been calculated to have cost the nation £25bn . Jayalalithaa won despite allegations that her opponents handed out free televisions, laptops, saris and other gifts including cash in return for support, and her victory was seen as a reflection of growing outrage over political graft. “It’s a hugely important development. It shows that concern about corruption is not just confined to the urban educated elite as many of the politicians have been saying,” said Mehta, of Outlook. “It’s very good news for democracy in India.” But it is Banerjee, a law and history graduate from a lower-middle-class family who wears a traditional sari with bathroom slippers and lives with her mother, who is the main focus of attention. In a country where politics is increasingly dominated by dynasties, she is an outsider. Banerjee, whose austere lifestyle is in stark contrast with that of some of India’s senior politicians, said on Friday that gender was not an issue. “It is not me, it is the people of Bengal. That I am a woman is not the issue. Without my sisters I cannot do my job but not without my brothers too,” she told the NDTV television channel. India Women Gender Jason Burke guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Labour calls for austerity programme to be eased as eurozone giants report rapid growth Fresh fears have been raised about the health of Britain’s moribund economy after the twin giants of the eurozone – Germany and France – posted rapid growth in the first three months of the year. Prompting fresh calls from Labour for an easing of the government’s austerity programme, figures showed that Germany, Europe’s biggest economy, expanded by 1.5% between January and March and has recovered all the ground lost in the global slump of 2008-9. France grew by an unexpectedly strong 1%. Ed Balls, the shadow chancellor, said the data was in sharp contrast to the UK, where the economy has gone sideways over the past six months and where national output is still 4% lower than before the recession. A weather-affected 0.5% drop in gross domestic product in the final three months of 2010 was followed by a similar bounce back in early 2011. Balls said the UK’s growth record was the third weakest in the European Union, with only Greece and Portugal – both in deep financial crisis – doing worse. “These figures expose how, since George Osborne’s spending review and VAT rise, Britain’s economy has gone from the fast lane to the slow lane,” Balls said. “As our economy has flatlined, countries like France, Belgium, the Netherlands and even Spain have overtaken us while Germany is powering ahead. “We’ve gone from the top end of the economic growth league table to being stuck at the bottom just above Greece and Portugal. These figures show the huge risks George Osborne is taking.” The Treasury said the government was being forced to tackle the problems inherited from Labour. “It’s good news that our biggest export markets are growing. It also underlines how much further into the danger zone the UK was 12 months ago. The government is having to deal with a deficit four times bigger than Germany’s,” a spokesman said. “Our housing bust was second only to Spain’s. But despite this, UK homeowners and small businesses are benefiting from the same low interest rates as in Germany and France. That’s because the world has confidence in the tough decisions the government is taking.” Analysts said that Germany, which is enjoying an investment boom as well as exporting heavily to China, was entering a new “wirtschaftswunder” – miracle economy – not seen in the decades after the second world war. Using one of Osborne’s favourite quotes, a Treasury source said: “Germany shows what you can do if you fix the roof while the sun is shining.” ING’s Carsten Brzeski, of ING, a Dutch banking, insurance and asset management group, said: “By now, even the last sceptics should have come to the conclusion that the German recovery is more than just a ‘statistical effect’. In fact, with its sound fundamentals, the economy is heading towards a second wirtschaftswunder.” Financial markets were also surprised by the performance of France, which has been less successful than Germany in seizing the export opportunities provided by fast-growing economies such as China. With some of the smaller monetary union nations such as Austria and the Netherlands also posting strong growth, the eurozone overall expanded by 0.8% in the first quarter of 2011. Howard Archer, chief economist at IHS Global Insight, said: “This is almost certainly as good as it gets for the eurozone and growth seems likely to moderate over the coming months. Nevertheless, there now looks a very decent chance that eurozone GDP growth will reach 2% in 2011 for the first time since 2007. “And the GDP growth rate of 0.8% quarter-on-quarter makes the UK’s 0.5% expansion look even more paltry.” Economic policy Europe Germany France Ed Balls Labour Economic growth (GDP) Economics Larry Elliott guardian.co.uk
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