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World Video News Roundup for April 7, 2011

Evans Liberal Politics
April 7, 2011

 

World Video News Roundup for April 7, 2011

News & Analysis from Around the World

With regard to the last "TrueLeaks" video on U.S. propoganda
Evans Liberal Politics makes no claim as to its validity.
We simply thought you should be exposed to this.
There IS a school of thought which says,
"better us than them." But what about morality?
Sadly, it seems to have little place in international politics.

Call ceasefire and go
Clinton tells Gaddafi

EU vows speedy
bailout help for Portugal

Japan nuclear crisis ‘breakthrough’

TrueLeaks – US propaganda

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President Obama’s Full Speech on the U.S. Mission in Libya March 28, 2011

Evans Liberal Politics
March 28, 2011, 7:30 p.m.

 

President Obama’s Full Speech
on the U.S. Mission in Libya March 28, 2011

World Video News Roundup for March 28, 2011

Evans Liberal Politics
March 28, 2011

 

World Video News Roundup for March 28, 2011

News & Analysis from Around the World

Al Jazeera on NATO command
of operations in Libya

Libyan rebels gain
momentum after Brega win

Japan’s government critical
of nuclear plant owners

Israel deploys first rocket
shield near Gaza

Anger sweeps Syria
after deaths

Green Party Win
Blow for Germany’s Merkel

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Radioactivity Levels Soar in Japan Seawater

Evans Liberal Politics
March 26, 2011

 

Radioactivity Levels Soar in Japan Seawater

Now 10,000 Confirmed Dead, 17,000 Missing in Japan

Radioactivity Levels Soar in Japan Seawater, Reuters on Common Dreams.org, March 26, 2011, by Chizu Nomiyama and Shinichi Saoshiro, excerpt quoted verbatim:

TOKYO – Radiation levels have soared in seawater near Japan’s crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, officials said on Saturday, as engineers struggled to stabilize the power station two weeks after it was hit by a massive earthquake and tsunami.

Japan Nuclear Plant Workers
Suffer Radiation Burns

Tests on Friday showed iodine 131 levels in seawater 30 km (19 miles) from the coastal nuclear complex had spiked 1,250 times higher than normal, but it was not considered a threat to marine life or food safety, the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency said.

“Ocean currents will disperse radiation particles and so it will be very diluted by the time it gets consumed by fish and seaweed,” said Hidehiko Nishiyama, a senior agency official.

Despite that reassurance, the disclosure may well heighten international concern over Japanese seafood exports. Several countries have already banned milk and produce from areas around the Fukushima Daiichi plant, while others have been monitoring Japanese seafood.

The prolonged efforts to prevent a catastrophic meltdown at the plant have also intensified concern around the world about nuclear power. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said it was time to reassess the international atomic safety regime.

Engineers were trying to pump radioactive water out of the power plant 240 km (150 miles) north of Tokyo, after it was found in buildings housing three of the six reactors. On Thursday, three workers sustained burns at reactor No. 3 after being exposed to radiation levels 10,000 times higher than usually found in a reactor.   ….

Read the full article here.

See How to Avoid Our Own Fukushima, Common Dreams.org, March 25, 2011, by Matias Ramos and the Institute for Policy Studies.

See Oldest US nuclear reactor: a ‘disaster’ in waiting?, The Raw Story, March 25, 2011, by Agence France-Presse.

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Fukushima Radiation: Some Difficult Truths

Evans Liberal Politics
March 25, 2011

 

Fukushima Radiation: Some Difficult Truths

Fukushima Radiation: Some Difficult Truths, Common Dreams.org, March 24, 2011, by Ritt Goldstein, used under Creative Commons 3.0 license, photo of nuclear power facility at Civaux, France courtesy of Wikimedia Commons, article quoted verbatim:

As radiation counts elevate in Japan, news of nuclear contamination spreading across a widening spectrum of life and its necessities, official pronouncements continue to play down events’ gravity. While some have questioned whether this is being pursued to promote calm, or perhaps the nuclear industry, the result has left many either skeptical of official claims or simply reassured by them. It seems time for some difficult facts.

photo of nuclear power facility at Civaux, France

Reports of false ‘nuclear rain’ warnings have made it to the news; but, just recently, so did valid rain warnings from local Japanese officials. And during the Chernobyl accident radioactive rain did occur, particularly striking some areas in Sweden.

It’s been estimated that “five percent of the released caesium-137 from the Chernobyl accident was deposited in Sweden due to heavy rainfall on 28-29 April 1986”.

Since Chernobyl, assorted scientific studies have demonstrated what one such effort termed the “serious impact of the Chernobyl accident on the environmental conditions in Sweden.” To this day, in some areas of the country Chernobyl’s legacy does remain a concern. And Sweden is a long way from Chernobyl.

While numerous proponents of nuclear power pursue what seems an exercise in surrealism, continuing to yet extoll ‘the benefits’ of ‘clean and safe’ nuclear energy, perhaps we should consider why so many trust that ‘the unthinkable’ can never occur…at least until it does.

It was 27 April 1986 when radiation alarms sounded at Sweden’s Försmark nuclear power plant, radiation upon workers’ clothing being the cause, though it would soon be discovered that the source of this radiation was not a local one. Hours after the alarm, the then USSR began revealing Chernobyl’s nuclear accident, an accident across the Baltic Sea and many hundreds of miles to the southeast. Meanwhile, not far up Sweden’s Baltic Coast from Försmark sat the city of Gävle, a city almost a thousand miles from Chernobyl, but soon a place to be lastingly impacted by it.

It was twenty-one years after the Chernobyl fire, in May 2007, when one Swedish paper headlined “Swedes still dying from Chernobyl radiation”, Gävle and what is occurring there figuring prominently in the english-language article. A heavy rainstorm had struck the small city in 1986, doing so as a cloud of Chernobyl’s fallout was overhead.

Prevailing winds at that time had driven radioactive clouds from Chernobyl over parts of Scandinavia, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) providing a report upon the early amounts of radiation registered in Chernobyl’s aftermath, a report where Gävle is again significantly featured. A recent article on Time.com, “Fukushima: Chernobyl Redux?”, describes the immediate effect Chernobyl had upon Gävle.

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Quoting from Time: “I remember that after Chernobyl there was a town in Northern Sweden called Gavle. The radioactive cloud went over the town and it started raining heavily and there was a lot of deposition of radioactive particulate material that was caught into surfaces of roads and buildings. There was a high level of cesium-137. When we went there and waved our Geiger counters about the counters maxed out–it was that bad.”

According to a 2006 Swedish study published in the American Journal of Industrial Medicine, it appears Sweden experienced approximately a thousand excess cancer fatalities because of Chernobyl, the number expected to increase, the cases concentrated proportional to the levels of radioactive exposure. As might be imagined, there were other health effects as well, such as effects with an impact upon unborn children.

A 2007 study performed by the prestigious National Bureau of Economic Reasearch, a Cambridge Massachusetts based think tank, examined the cognitive effects of Chernobyl’s radiation upon Swedish children. It found evidence that: “fetal exposure to ionizing radiation damages cognitive ability at radiation levels previously considered safe.”

Notably, this journalist lives about a ninety minute drive from Gävle, and I only heard of the cognitive problems through a chance meeting while food shopping. I was told that an unusually high number of pregnancies during the peak radiation period had resulted in children with cognitive issues, the above report suggesting the accuracy of that information. But only some years ago, I personally had lived in Gävle; though, I had no idea of its relationship to Chernobyl until I took up residence there.

Initially, one of the places I had lived was on the shore of a picturesque lake, the village it was in being about a half hour from the city’s center. I was struck by how lovely it was, until I learned one couldn’t eat the fish, and it wasn’t a good idea to do too much swimming, radiation being a problem.

Twenty years after Chernobyl, in 2006, Swedish National Television (SVT) did a news piece titled “Chernobyl still affects Gävle every day” (Tjernobyl påverkar ännu Gävle-vardagen). Among other items, it discusses how wild game is checked for radiation, and how residents now often travel to pick the wild berries or mushrooms that they once collected locally.

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The effects of radiation proved lasting, and recent news reports revealed radiation has entered Japan’s food chain, affecting farm produce and milk, many levels of contamination being high multiples of the regulation limits.

Emphasizing what many perceive as a substantive part of the ongoing problem, The New York Times quoted Japan’s deputy chief cabinet secretary, Tetsuro Fukuyama, as observing that he would let his own children “eat the spinach” from Fukushima. But such ‘understatement’ has not been confined to Japan, the IAEA itself stating that only “up to four thousand” cancer fatalities will result from Chernobyl.

In contrast to IAEA fatality figures, a 2006 Greenpeace report forecast 100,000 cancer deaths, and a 2010 book by leading Eastern European scientists utilizing original ‘Slavic language’ documents (“Chernobyl: Consequences of the Catastrophe for People and the Environment”), claims a death toll of 985,000.

While some uncertainties exist, there are hard facts. The recent findings of contamination in Tokyo’s water supply is one of them, another being a New York Times report that Japan’s broader “contamination levels are well beyond what you’d expect from what is in the public domain”. The report added that this suggested problems “were deeper than had been publicly acknowledged.”

Gävle is about a thousand miles from Chernobyl, and the amount of nuclear fuel present at Chernobyl during the 1986 accident is reported as about 180 tons, none of which contained plutonium, an element much more toxic than the uranium used in standard reactor fuel. Estimates of the amount of nuclear fuel present at Fukushima are roughly in the 2000 ton range, dwarfing Chernobyl, and one of the six reactors (number 3) does use a mixture of plutonium and uranium, ‘mox’.

If nothing else, it would appear nuclear power is not the ‘clean, safe, inexpensive and reliable’ energy source some claim. As to what nuclear power is, both its past and ongoing catastrophes seem to amply define it.

Ritt Goldstein (ritt1997@hotmail.com) is an American investigative political journalist based in Stockholm. His work has appeared in broadsheets such as Australia’s Sydney Morning Herald, Spain’s El Mundo and Denmark’s Politiken, as well as with the Inter Press Service (IPS), a global news agency.

Japan Video News Roundup for March 23, 2011

Evans Liberal Politics
March 23, 2011

 

Japan Video News Roundup for March 23, 2011

News & Analysis of the Nuclear Situation in Japan

Caring for Japan’s survivors

Japan food contamination fears

Hopes rise as power is restored
at Fukushima plant

Radiation Levels 1600X Higher
Than Norm Near Fukushima Plant

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Where is Japan’s nuclear power CEO?

Evans Liberal Politics
March 22, 2011

 

Where is Japan’s nuclear power CEO?

Where is Japan’s nuclear power CEO?, Reuters, March 20, 2011, by Terril Yue Jones, excerpt quoted verbatim:

(Reuters) – The head of the Japanese power company at the centre of one of the world’s worst nuclear disasters has all but vanished from the public eye.

SIGN PETITION

image of a shoping back with the words Defend NPR and PBS serves as a link to sign a petition

And many Japanese, on a knife edge waiting to see if the nuclear power plant and radiation leaks can be brought under control, are beginning to ask where he is and questioning how much he is in control of the crisis.

Masataka Shimizu, chief executive of Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO), has not made a public appearance in a week.

And he has yet to visit the crippled nuclear power plant north of Tokyo that was badly damaged in the massive earthquake and tsunami that struck on March 11, and where 300 workers are desperately trying to find ways to cool down the reactors.

According to the Mainichi Shimbun newspaper, he did not even show up at company headquarters until a day after the disaster because he was stranded in the west of the country after trains stopped running.

At his last news conference, a week ago, the 66-year-old apologised for the situation. Since then, he has all but vanished from public view, issuing one statement on Saturday expressing regret for “causing such trouble.”

Shimizu is a consummate company man, joining the company where his father worked, at the age of 23. Japanese media have quoted him as saying he wanted to work at a company “which serves public interests.”

At the country’s biggest power supplier, he made a name for himself as a cost-cutter in the procurement side of the business, becoming company president in June 2008. ….

Read the full article here.

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