Parents and three children aged between three months and 11 knifed to death in their West Bank home Five members of a Jewish settler family have been murdered in their home in what police suspect was an operation by Palestinian militants. The parents and three children, aged 11, three and three months, were attacked with knives in their house in the West Bank settlement of Itamar, near the Palestinian city of Nablus, on Friday. It is believed that two of the dead had their throats cut. The alarm was raised by the couple’s 12-year-old daughter, who had been at an event organised by a religious youth movement on the settlement and returned home to find the bloodsoaked scene. Two other children, who had been asleep at the time of the attack, were unharmed. The area was immediately sealed off by Israeli police and soldiers as a manhunt was launched. Checkpoints were set up on the road leading to Itamar, which was declared a closed military zone. The Israeli army launched an operation in the nearby Palestinian village of Awata early on Saturday, arresting around two dozen young men. According to an Israeli settlement security official who did not want to be named, one or two Palestinians scaled the security fence surrounding Itamar, and entered the family’s home through a window. The father, he said, was a teacher in a religious school in the settlement. The bodies of the dead were believed to be still at the house and would not be removed until the end of Shabat. “An innocent family – a father, mother and three of their children – were murdered in the middle of the night by despicable terrorists,” said Maj Gen Avi Mizrahi of the Israeli military central command, who visited the scene. “Rest assured, we are on a hunt for those responsible, and we will find them.” The prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, said the family had been murdered “while they were sleeping in their home on the Sabbath evening”. He demanded that the Palestinian Authority assist in the manhunt. “Israel will not stand by idly after such a despicable murder,” he said. It was the first killing of settlers since four adults were shot dead in a drive-by shooting near Hebron on the eve of direct talks between Israel and the Palestinians in September. The talks stalled after three weeks following Israel’s refusal to extend a freeze on settlement expansion in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, a pivotal issue for the Palestinians. The West Bank has seen few militant operations in recent years as the Palestinian Authority has stepped up security measures as part of its efforts to build the basis of a future state. Last month, Israel removed the infamous Harawa checkpoint, close to Itamar, in an indication of improved security in the area. But there has been continued tension between Palestinian villagers and hardline settlers, with regular skirmishes over the destruction of olive trees. Settlers have pledged to resist the evacuation of unauthorised outposts, which Netanyahu said last week would be completed by the end of this year. Itamar, home to around 100 families, is an intensely nationalist-religious isolated settlement deep inside the West Bank. Nationalist-religious Jews believe they have a divine right to the land irrespective of legal ownership. In Awata, Khalil Shurrab said that “many, many soldiers” had come in the early hours, going house to house to round up people suspected of involvement in the killings. Residents showed visitors spent tear gas canisters and rooms in houses that they said had been trashed by soldiers. Hilary Minch, a volunteer with a Christian monitoring group based near Nablus, said the army had used live ammunition and stun grenades. “The next 24 hours will be very tense,” she said. “The villagers fear retribution by the settlers.” Palestinian territories Israel Middle East Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …UPDATE: Stratfor.com, the global intelligence site, is reporting that the Fukushima plant is in at least partial meltdown. The BBC reports that there’s been a “huge” explosion at the plant . This remains my main concern about nuclear power plants. People are always telling me how “safe” they are — yes, they’re safe. Until something unusual happens, like yesterday’s massive earthquake : TOKYO — Japan declared states of emergency for five nuclear reactors at two power plants after the units lost cooling ability in the aftermath of Friday’s powerful earthquake. Thousands of residents were evacuated as workers struggled to get the reactors under control to prevent meltdowns. Operators at the Fukushima Daiichi plant’s Unit 1 scrambled ferociously to tamp down heat and pressure inside the reactor after the 8.9 magnitude quake and the tsunami that followed cut off electricity to the site and disabled emergency generators, knocking out the main cooling system. Some 3,000 people within two miles (three kilometers) of the plant were urged to leave their homes, but the evacuation zone was more than tripled to 6.2 miles (10 kilometers) after authorities detected eight times the normal radiation levels outside the facility and 1,000 times normal inside Unit 1′s control room. The government declared a state of emergency at the Daiichi unit — the first at a nuclear plant in Japan’s history. But hours later, the Tokyo Electric Power Co., which operates the six-reactor Daiichi site, announced that it had lost cooling ability at a second reactor there and three units at its nearby Fukushima Daini site . The government quickly declared states of emergency for those units, too, and thousands of residents near Fukushima Daini also were told to leave. Japan’s nuclear safety agency said the situation was most dire at Fukushima Daiichi’s Unit 1, where pressure had risen to twice what is consider the normal level. The International Atomic Energy Agency said in a statement that diesel generators that normally would have kept cooling systems running at Fukushima Daiichi had been disabled by tsunami flooding. Officials at the Daiichi facility began venting radioactive vapors from the unit to relieve pressure inside the reactor case. The loss of electricity had delayed that effort for several hours. Plant workers there labored to cool down the reactor core, but there was no prospect for immediate success. They were temporarily cooling the reactor with a secondary system, but it wasn’t working as well as the primary one, according to Yuji Kakizaki, an official at the Japanese nuclear safety agency. The Atomic Insights blogger seems to think anyone who’s worried is overreacting . Assuming he has correct information, he may be right — but my skepticism is centered mostly around the fact that government officials often withhold accurate information in disasters. (Christine Todd Whitman assuring Ground Zero workers they were safe is just one that springs to mind.) He cites this white paper on the safety of nuclear power plants as proof. I don’t know how it works in other countries, but believing that for-profit nuclear power plants operated by companies whose first priority is the bottom line will build according to the highest specifications, and safely operate the plants exactly as they’re supposed to, well, that seems a little naive. So while experts assume the situation is under control, my position is that we may not know exactly what happened for a long, long time.
Continue reading …Military are seeking murderer of a family of five, with two other children injured The Israeli military are searching for the killer of five people murdered in a Jewish West Bank settlement early on Saturday, a military spokeswoman said. Israeli media is reporting that the dead are all members of the same family – parents and three children. The victims – including an 11-year-old, a 3-year-old and an infant – were all stabbed in their sleep. The military says it is sweeping the area in search of the perpetrator and has set up checkpoints throughout the West Bank. It has instructed all residents to stay in their homes during the extensive sweeps. The military blocked the entrance to the northern West Bank settlement of Itamar, as soldiers poured inside and a pair of ambulances departed. The overnight attack is the first attack against settlers in months and the first of its kind and scope in years. It marks a rare outburst of violence during a relatively calm period. It also comes as Israeli-Palestinian peace efforts are at a standstill and seems likely to complicate efforts to restart them. Itamar is home to some of the West Bank’s most fervent settlers. The attack took place in the middle of the night, on the Jewish Sabbath. The attack was reminiscent of a similar one in Itamar in June 2002, during the height of the violent Palestinian uprising, when a gunman burst into the home of a family and opened fire. Another two children were seriously injured. Israel Middle East Palestinian territories guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media As irritated as I can get with Bill Maher at times — and tonight was no exception, with him putting on one of the embarrassments to my city on his show that rates right in there with The Gateway Pundit for making St. Louisians look like fools, namely Dana Loesch — I’d say Maher got this one right, with reality television and the real income disparity in the United States that they’re glossing over. Maher: America’s rich aren’t giving you money, they’re taking your money. Between the years 1980 and 2005 80% of all new income generated in this country went to the richest 1%. Let me put that in terms that even you fatass teabaggers, I’m sorry, can understand. Say 100 Americans get together and order a 100 slice pizza. The pizza arrives and the first guy takes 80 slices. And if someone suggests, why don’t you just take 79 slices, that’s socialism! I know, I know. I know, I know, it’s just a TV show. But it does reinforce the stupid idea people have that rich people would love us and share with us if only they got to walk a mile in our cheap plastic shoes. But they’re the reason the shoe factory moved to China. We have this fantasy that our interests and the interests of the super rich are the same. Like somehow the rich will eventually get so full that they’ll explode. And the candy will rain down on the rest of us. Like there’s some kind of pinata of benevolence. But here’s the thing about a pinata. It doesn’t open on its own. You have to beat it with a stick. To which teabagger Loesch gets terribly upset with the “tone” of Bill’s rhetoric which he rightfully ignored because anyone who follows Maher knows he’s not talking about literally beating the hell out of anyone here and it’s a metaphor for forcing them to do what’s right through other means like protests and the political process. That said, I’m sure him joking about dropping Greenspan in with a bunch of poor people will be something she’ll be blogging about to take literally as well. Maher: So I say, forget Secret Millionaire, I have a better idea for a show. Every week one of the men responsible for the global financial meltdown is dropped into a poor neighborhood and… and that’s it. No cameras. We just leave him there. I call it I’m Alan Greenspan, get me out of here. It’s a sad state of affairs that our country has been left in by corporate greed and the fact that most of the have-mores could care less about the American worker. Thank you, Bill, for giving the working class a voice on the subject. It almost makes me want to forgive you for having Dana Loesch on as a guest. If you’re running short on suggestions for who to have on your show, I could give you at least fifty or a hundred as I’m sure the readers here at C&L could as well who would make for better conversation than Loesch.
Continue reading …Today's installment of the Decline and Fall of Western Civilization comes from Hollywood – as if that’s a surprise. Tinseltown is demeaning Christianity again – as if that’s a surprise, too. But this time, it’s not some gutter-mouthed punk. This time it’s a network doing it, formally. ABC has approved a pilot with the title “Good Christian Bitches.” Is this what Christian women – especially the good ones — deserve? The first credit for this decision to offer offensive titles actually goes to CBS, which began this stupid trend with its awful sitcom “$#8! My Dad Says.” Now one of Discovery's cable channels has a show titled “Who the [Bleep] Did I Marry?” It chronicles women who have married vicious criminals. But Disney-owned ABC (oh, the irony) has not one, but two B-word pilots in its outhouse of a production department. They're also considering a show titled “Don't Trust the Bitch in Apartment 23.” Mickey Mouse should have his hands over his ears. This titling trend matches Tinseltown's concerted effort to add profanity “seasoning” to spice nearly every script on network TV shows. On prime time broadcast TV, use of the B-word alone increased from 431 instances in 1998 to 1,277 in 2007. If this show wasn’t marketed directly at a female audience, the same ones who watch those witch-versus-witch reality shows like the “Real Housewives” shows on Bravo, the B-word would sound more sexist and demeaning. So it’s okay to say it because it’s become a word women can call each other. Now, if it’s used by an angry male, it’s a hanging crime. We’re talking about something verging on domestic violence. Might ABC bow to any sense of decency and change the titles before it picks these shows up for the fall? Fagetaboutit. “GCB” is based on a novel by Kim Gatlin, who unsurprisingly stole her own concept from ABC. A divorced mother of two returns to her hometown in the Dallas suburbs, and as Gatlin describes it, “In an 'Alfred Hitchcock Presents,' 'Desperate Housewives'-on-steroids style, her old friends are already out to destroy her reputation.” So that makes them good Christian bitches. If this were a CBS pilot, they could just call it “Desperate Housewives: Dallas.” (That seems to work for “CSI” and “NCIS.”) Gatlin claims the title isn't mocking God, that it just refers to people who fall more than a little short of good Christian behavior. But she is so fond of the scandalous sound of her sleazy title that her website (using those same words) sells a pile of merchandise with the initials “GCB” and a cross on it, from shirts, caps, and tote bags all the way down to overpriced “party packs” of peppermint gum and styrofoam cups. Playing on religion – and these churchgoing female hypocrites – is all part of the sale. Gatlin also promotes the book this way: “In the whirling midst of salacious gossip, Botox, and fraud, Amanda turns to those who love her and the faith she’s always known. Will the [GCBs] get the best of her, or will everyone see that these GCBs are as counterfeit as their travel jewelry?” Then, in big bold letters, Gatlin's slogan says it all: “For Heaven’s sake, don’t let God get in the way of a good story!” No one should doubt that it's this author and the “Desperate” TV network which win the gold medal for abusing a religion. ABC feels free to pick on Christianity – after all, what faith would your fictional churchgoing hypocrites stereotypically follow in Dallas, Texas? No one in Hollywood would consider swapping the “Christian” in the title for “Muslim” – that would be oafishly cruel and discriminatory and hate-filled, not to mention potentially life-threatening. How about moving the setting to Beverly Hills and calling it “Good Jewish Bitches”? Regardless of trashy titles, real faith-filled people don't relish and wallow in the sins and hypocrisies of others. Gatlin's premise cashes in on the gossipy failures of the people in the pews, but for her and her TV partners, this is all a gold mine to exploit. They don't despair about it. They revel in it, like kids in a candy store. If ABC picks up this pilot, it’s very likely that the sour message that will be resonate is that everyone who goes to church, including priests and ministers, can be exposed as a fraud and a counterfeit. That is consistent with Hollywood's long-standing hostility to the faith of its own audience.
Continue reading …Just as the insistent MoveOn.org lobbying campaign for PBS tells you something about
Continue reading …Full coverage from the coalition partner’s conference in Sheffield, where Nick Clegg and NHS reforms are expected to come under fire 11.37am: Evan Harris, the former MP, is summing up now. He is backing the first amendment. He says it is unusual for him to be backing an amendment to which no one objects. He says he does not want Nick Clegg and Paul Burstow to be “relaxed” about losing the amendment go through. It will not be enough for Clegg to try to amend the bill. The conference will expect Clegg and Burstow to do what it says. Harris acknowledges that Lansley has intervened to stop private providers competing on price. But the argument about cherry picking is not just about price, he says. Private providers may provide a decent service. But if they take all the easy work, they will damage the NHS by leaving it responsible for the hard stuff. The Lib Dems want to see the bill changed “radically”, he says. We are not going to associate ourselves with the re-toxification of the Tory brand. 11.31am: Andrew George, the MP for St Ives, is speaking now. He pays tribute to the work Paul Burstow has done in government. But he says that he is speaking against the main motion tabled by Burstow. Voting down the motion would “send a very strong message”, he says. It would show the coalition has not turned the Lib Dems into “forelock-tugging automatons”. (George explained his case in more detail in an article today in the Independent.) 11.29am: Michael Ninnmey, a councillor, says that NHS staff are “demoralised” and that reorganisation will be a complete waste of money. Jan O’Hara, who describes herself as a health care professional, says that if politicians really want the NHS to succeed, they should “leave it alone”. 11.27am: The chair is now taking a series of one-minute interventions. So far, apart from Paul Burstow, we have not heard from a single speaker who is enthusiastic about the NHS reforms as they are now. 11.21am: Shirley Williams has just finished a short speech. She was supporting the first amendment. I’ve described it as a “rebel” amendment, although she said that nothing she was doing should be seen as an attempt to undermine Nick Clegg or the coalition. She said she was concerned about the government’s plans for three reasons. First, massive reorganisation would be very costly. Second, GP consortia who commission services under the Lansley plans will be unaccountale. Unlike primary care trusts, they will meet in private. And, third, the private sector will cherry pick the easy cases. She said she knew private hospitals in London that routinely passed their difficult patients onto NHS hospitals. It was a short speech, without any rhetorical flourishes, but she got a tremendous round of applause. 11.16am: The second amendment today says half the seats on the government’s proposed health and welbeing boards should be councillors. Miranda Whitehead, a doctor, has just told the conference that she thinks this would be a mistake. 11.09am: John Pugh, the Southport MP, is speaking now. He says that the conference should have had more than an hour to debate this topic. Reforming the NHS is like turning around an oil tanker, he says. But turning around an oil tanker is even harder if you are taking it apart at the same time. Pugh says the conference is being asked to endorse something that is not Lib Dem health policy, not Conservative health policy and not even coalition health policy. The coalition agreement says there should be no top-down health reorganisation. Any delegates with doubts about the plans should vote for amendment one, he says. Not supporting amendment one is not being loyal, he says. It would be “giving licence to the biggest political, financial and health risk ever taken with our treasured national asset”. 11.07am: You can read all the conference motions here (pdf). And the amendments being debated today are in this document (pdf). 10.56am: Charles West, a doctor, is speaking now. He is moving the first amendement, which is critical of the government’s plans. He says there are two main problems with what the government is doing. First, the plans involve a reorganisation that will cost £3bn. And, second, they will introduce market competition into the service. Andrew Lansley, the health secretary, has already said that he will amend the health bill so that the private providers cannot compete on price. He will change take out a clause in the bill referring to the “maximum” tariff which implies that providers can undercut the “maximum”. But West says tariffs only apply to 30% of NHS procedures. Even with the Lansley amendment, private providers will still be able to “cherry pick”, for example by picking up profitable training contracts. The amendment, which is also backed by the former Lib Dem MP Evan Harris, says private providers should only be allowed to provide NHS services “where there is no risk of ‘cherry picking’ which would destabilise or undermine the existing NHS service”. 10.52am: Paul Burstow says he would resign from the government if there was a threat of an American-style health system being introduced in the UK. He also says that he knows Lib Dem delegates are concerned about the prospect of private providers being allowed to “cherry pick” the most profitable work under the government’s health reforms. But the health bill will not allow this, he says. The government is closing a loophole that allows private providers to be paid more than NHS providers for the same work. 10.48am: I’m sitting in the conference hall at Sheffield City Hall. It has taken a little longer than expected to set up – the security here is much tighter than it was at the Conservative spring conference in Cardiff last week – but I got a seat just before the health debate started and the wifi seems to work, so we should be okay for the rest of the day. Paul Burstow is opening the health debate. He started with a joke about how the Lib Dems used to be able to debate policy at their spring conference without anyone taking any notice. Not any more. He also said that he would be listening to every word said during the debate, and that if he could improve the health bill as it goes through parliament, he would. 10.40am: Spring conferences tend to be low-key affairs. But the Liberal Democrat spring conference taking place in Sheffield may well turn out to be one to remember. In an interview in the Independent yesterday Nick Clegg said that those who “want to build this up into the Gunfight at the OK Corral” were wrong and that he was “very relaxed and very positive” about the row about the government’s NHS reforms that is expected to dominate the proceedings. But others believe that he is underestimating what’s at stake. In a letter published in the Guardian on Thursday, Michael Quinton, a long-serving party member, said the conference would be crucial to the party’s future. A Lib Dem walkout [from the coalition] might at least slam the door for a time on the early implementation of some of the most damaging policies, on the NHS, education, local government and several more, being promoted by some of the most ideologically motivated Tory zealots. I know I am not alone in believing that almost everything we hold dear hangs on the outcome of this weekend’s party conference and I just hope there are enough people there with the courage to save us. Even allowing for a little “letter to the editor” hyperbole, this is strong stuff. Clegg and Quinton were referring specifically to the debate on the government’s NHS reforms that will take place this morning. Paul Burstow, the Lib Dem health minister, is proposing a motion defending the government’s health bill. But two “rebel” amendments have been tabled demanding changes that would limit the role private companies could play in the provision of NHS services. The conference is expected to support the “rebels”. This would be embarrassing for Clegg, because the conference would effectively be voting against government policy, but Labour got used to this when it was in government and the amendments don’t reject the health bill outright. Clegg and Burstow would be under pressure to amend the bill, although quite what impact a “defeat” would have on government policy remains unclear. But this is not just about the NHS. The reason this issue has come to be seen as so important is that is has become a proxy for much wider concerns. In reality, what this debate is really about is: a) Whether the Lib Dems are essentially a leftish public sector party, or rightish free marketeers? b) Whether the Lib Dems can maintain an identity as independent party, or whether they will increasingly be identifed with the Conservatives? These two questions are, of course, linked, although there is not a complete overlap. They are likely to preoccupy Liberal Democrats for years to come and this weekend’s conference will not settle the matter for good. But it should provide some clues as to where the party is heading. The health debate is the most important event coming up today, but it’s not the only item on the agenda. Here’s a full list. 10.15am: Debate on disability living allowance. 10.45am: Debate on health. 11.45am: Q&A with Vince Cable, the business secretary, and Ed Davey, the employment minister. 2.20pm: Debate on a motion calling for the age of criminal responsibility to be raised from 10 to 14. 3.35pm: Q&A session with Nick Clegg. 4.20pm: Debate on a plan to set up a “leadership programme” of approved candidates to increase the number of Lib Dem MPs who are women or from an ethnic minority. 5.30pm: Debate on internal party business, with short speeches from Tim Farron and Vince Cable. Liberal Democrat conference Liberal Democrats Andrew Sparrow guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Explosion reported at Fukushima nuclear plant • Death toll said to be more than 1,300 • Tsunami engulfs northern port of Sendai and islands • Around 50,000 rescuers have been deployed For earlier updates, read the Guardian’s previous live blog 10.28am: According to Oxfam, the damage to several Pacific countries in the path of the tsunami has been limited and alerts are gradually being lifted: Overnight reports had suggested that the incoming tsunami wave could be higher than many low-lying Pacific islands, with the potential to wash right over them. With thousands of islands to account for, it will be some time before the complete picture is available. However, early information suggests these islands so far appear to have avoided the worst-case scenario. 10.25am: The Guardian’s Tania Branigan says that Japanese authorities are extending the evacuation zone around the two Fukushima nuclear plants from 10km to 20km. The BBC has a video of smoke coming from Fukushima plant No 1 following the explosion . 10.22am: Here’s more details of the situation at Fukushima Daiichi No 1 plant from AP. A the news agency reports that it is not clear if a reactor meltdown would cause a serious radiation risk, and if it did how far the risk would extend: Yaroslov Shtrombakh, a Russian nuclear expert, said a Chernobyl-style meltdown was unlikely. “It’s not a fast reaction like at Chernobyl,” he said. “I think that everything will be contained within the grounds, and there will be no big catastrophe.” In 1986, the Chernobyl nuclear reactor exploded and caught fire, sending a cloud of radiation over much of Europe. Pressure has been building up in Fukushima reactor it’s now twice the normal level and Japan’s Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency told reporters Saturday that the plant was venting “radioactive vapors.” Officials said they were measuring radiation levels in the area. Wind in the region is weak and headed northeast, out to sea, according to the Meteorological Agency. The reactor in trouble has already leaked some radiation: Operators have detected eight times the normal radiation levels outside the facility and 1,000 times normal inside Unit 1′s control room. Ryohei Shiomi, a nuclear official, said that each hour the plant was releasing the amount of radiation a person normal absorbs in a year. He has said that even if there were a meltdown, it wouldn’t affect people outside a six-mile (10-kilometer) radius an assertion that might need revising if the situation deteriorates. Most of the 51,000 residents living within the danger area had been evacuated, he said. 10.04am: Here’s a recap of what we know about the two damaged nuclear plants. •Japan’s prime minister Naoto Kan has declared a state of emergency at two nuclear power plants as engineers try to establish whether a reactor at one of the stations has gone into meltdown. • Diesel generators that normally would have worked as back-ups to keep cooling systems running had been disabled by tsunami flooding. • Power supply systems to provide emergency electricity for the plants were being put in place, the World Nuclear Association said. • Both plants are light water reactors operated by the Tokyo Electric Power company (or Tepco). Fukushima Daiichi No 1 plant – Japanese media said officials had detected caesium, one of the elements released when overheating causes core damage, around a reactor at Fukushima No 1 plant in Futuba, 150 miles (240km) north of Tokyo. The plant has six reactors, three of which have been shut down for maintenance. – The Tokyo Electric Power Company (Tepco) said it did not believe a meltdown was under way, but Ryohei Shiomi, an official with Japan’s nuclear safety commission, said that it was possible. Fukushima Daini No 2 plant – has four reactors, and in units 1, 2 and 4 of them the operator has said it has lost cooling ability. – Tepco says pressure is stable inside the reactors of the Daini plant but rising in the containment vessels. • Both plants have been declared to be in a state of emergency by the government, and an evacuation of the 80,000 residents who live within the 10km zone around both plants is underway. 9.46am: Good morning, this is David Batty with live coverage of the aftermath of the devastating 8.9 magnitude earthquake that struck Japan on Friday, causing a tsunami. A huge rescue mission is underway on Saturday amid growing fears of radiation leaks at nuclear power stations damaged by the disaster. Here’s a round-up of events so far in Japan on Saturday. • There are growing fears about damage to two nuclear power stations following Friday’s 8.9 magnitute earthquake. There has been an explosion at a building at one of the plants, Fukushima No 1 in Futuba, 150 miles (240km) north of Tokyo. Japanese authorities have extended the evacuation area at the Fukushima No 2 plant to 10km, the same distance as for Fukushima No 1 plant. • The death toll from the disaster is expected to exceed 1,300, with most deaths due to drowning. The official death toll currently stands at 413, with 784 people missing and 1,128 injured. Police said between 200 and 300 bodies were found along the coast in Sendai, the biggest city in the area near the quake’s epicentre. • Police estimate that more than 215,000 people are taking refuge in emergency shelters in the east and north of the country. Many survivors have been trapped overnight on rooftops, surrounded by a sea of mud and water. Around 50,000 rescuers have deployed to the region. • Tsunami warnings for most of Japan have been lowered, although there is still a risk of large waves along the north-eastern coast. • The tsunami rolled across the Pacific at jet speed but had weakened before it hit Hawaii and the West Coast of the US. Initial reports suggest limited tsunami damage to Pacific island nations. For more details of events in Japan overnight and this morning, please check our earlier live blog . Japan earthquake and tsunami Japan Natural disasters and extreme weather Nuclear power David Batty guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Japanese media said officials had detected caesium, one of the elements released when overheating causes core damage, around the reactor at Fukushima No 1 plant in Futuba Japan tsunami and earthquake – live coverage Workers are battling to stave off a possible nuclear meltdown at a plant in north-eastern Japan as the country struggles with the aftermath of Friday’s enormous earthquake and tsunami. Japanese media said officials had detected caesium, one of the elements released when overheating causes core damage, around the reactor at Fukushima No 1 plant in Futuba, 150 miles north of Tokyo. The Tokyo Electric Power Company said it did not believe a meltdown was underway but Ryohei Shiomi, an official with Japan’s nuclear safety commission, said that it was possible. But experts and authorities played down the dangers of a Chernobyl-style disaster saying they believed a partial meltdown was controllable. The government urged people to remain calm. They had earlier evacuated 20,000 residents living within 10km on the plant on the orders of Prime minister Naoto Kan, who had inspected it via helicopter. Experts told Associated Press that the risk area was 6km. The crisis began when the 8.9 magnitude shock cut out power, turning off the water supply needed to cool the system. The tsunami is thought to have cut off the backup diesel generator an hour later, leading to pressure rising rapidly within the reactor. Broadcaster NHK said that attempts to vent radioactive gas to lower pressure had been suspended because the radiation level on one valve was higher than expected, heightening the risk of exposing workers to radiation. Earlier in the day a Japanese nuclear safety panel said radiation levels were 1,000 times higher than normal in a control room and eight times normal just outside the plant. Workers were frequently changing shifts. The Tokyo Electric Power Company has also reported problems with a second reactor at the plant, and declared an emergency at the Fukushima No 2 plant. Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano said the pressure control system was not functioning at the plant’s three reactors. Officials are evacuating residents within a three kilometre radius and have ordered those with 10 kilometres to stay indoors, NHK said. Naoto Sekimura, a professor at the University of Tokyo, told AP a major radioactive disaster was unlikely. “No Chernobyl is possible at a light water reactor. Loss of coolant means a temperature rise, but it also will stop the reaction,” he said. “Even in the worst-case scenario, that would mean some radioactive leakage and equipment damage, but not an explosion. If venting is done carefully, there will be little leakage. Certainly not beyond the 3 km radius.” A partial meltdown in one of the light water reactors at Three Mile Island in 1979 resulted in the release of radioactive gases in the most serious incident in the history of the US nuclear power industry. The reactor was eventually brought under control despite a series of errors. Across the worst hit north-east Tohoku region of Japan at least 630 people are dead and a similar number missing, according to police sources, with 1,128 injured. The country has mobilised 50,000 rescuers but they have yet to reach the most severely affected areas. Residents woke up after a freezing night on rooftops and in emergency shelters to a sea of mud, water and debris. Earthquakes continued to rock the north-east coast overnight, although some said the worst tremors appeared to be subsiding. Japan downgraded tsunami warnings in most areas but the Tohoku remained on high alert for waves up to 10m high. The tsunami has reached countries across the Pacific region but there were no reports of major damage outside Japan. Images shot from helicopters showed many people still crowding the rooftops of buildings surrounded by water and mud. Some, including small children, were winched to safety by rescuers. Other footage showed the letters SOS spelled out on the roof of a hospital in Iwanuma, Miyagi prefecture. Photographs from Sendai – one of the worst hit cities – showed families crammed into schools. “The flood came in from behind the store and swept around both sides. Cars were flowing right by,” said Wakio Fushima, who owns a convenience store in Sendai, which has around 1 million inhabitants and is 80 miles from the quake’s epicenter. Witnesses said the tsunami had swept inland about six miles. “The tsunami was unbelievably fast. Smaller cars were being swept around me and all I could do was sit in my truck,” said truck driver Koichi Takairin, 34, who was trapped in his four-ton vehicle by the torrent. Hundreds queued outside supermarkets for basic supplies and petrol stations were swamped with cars. Authorities warned citizens in northern Japan to be prepared for severe power cuts due to the shut down of nuclear plants, which provide about 30% of the country’s electricity. More than 1 million households are without water. Phone voice services are also down across much of the north east, although data services seemed to be working sporadically. Japan earthquake and tsunami Japan Natural disasters and extreme weather Tania Branigan guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Former Clinton advisor and current CNN contributor Paul Begala thought he was being clever Friday evening when he took a cheap shot at George W. Bush on HBO's “Real Time.” Without skipping a beat, St. Louis Tea Party founder and Big Government editor Dana Loesch smacked down her CNN colleague with a delicious jab at his former boss (video follows with transcript and commentary): DANA LOESCH, EDITOR BIG GOVERNMENT: The opposition I think is being a little bit underestimated. These are people who are barely armed and they have no air support and they've been able to beat back Gadhafi’s forces and accomplish as much as they have without anyone busting up through the door and providing them support. So, I don't understand why it would be necessary to essentially create the exact same strategy that everyone complained about in Iraq with the Bush Doctrine and replicate it in Libya, because that’s exactly what this is. BILL T. JONES, CHOREOGRAPHER/ARTISTIC DIRECTOR: You think we should wait this out? BILL MAHER, HOST: I think we should finish the quagmires we already have on our plate before we order more. FORMER REPUBLICAN REPRESENTATIVE TOM DAVIS: No, Bill, we need to bring other countries into it with us… MAHER: Right. DAVIS: …other countries into it with us. MAHER: Yes. Where’s the Arab League? Where’s the Europeans? LOESCH: France is already, they’re going to put an embassy. They’ve already recommended… PAUL BEGALA, CNN: I’m just glad we have a president who when we have a problem in Libya doesn't freak out and invade Liberia. MAHER: Right. BEGALA: Which is what the last guy, that’s what Bush would have done. LOESCH: Or you know what? Or accidentally bomb a medicine factory like Clinton did. For those that forget the reference, in August 1998, President Clinton bombed the Al-Shifa pharmaceutical factory in Sudan as a reprisal for terrorist attacks on U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. The incident ended up being rather embarrassing for the Clinton administration as Sudan and other governments disputed any connection between the factory and Osama bin Laden. Nicely played, Dana. Brava!
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