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Cuba: Facts and Realities

Englightening the President and the Press

“No hay peor ciego que el que no quiere ver”

– Spanish saying

(There is no worse blind person than the one who does not wish to see.)

On May 13, Miami newspaper headlines and TV leads should have said: “Obama makes fool of himself.” The “leads” would have referred to his statement: “I would welcome real change from the Cuban government.”

Obama’s conditions? “For us to have the kind of normal relations we have with other countries, we’ve got to see significant changes from the Cuban government and we just have not seen that yet.”

A clever tabloid might have headlined, “Obama Goes Blind – Can’t See Changes Right in Front of His Eyes!”

If Granma had a sense of humor its editorial would have begun with: “President Obama stands for `Change we can believe in,’ but does not stand for change Cuba’s leaders believe in.”

Full Story Here: Saul Landau and Nelson Valdés: Cuba: Facts and Realities.

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Strauss-Kahn screws Africa

Greg Palast :-:

Now that I’ve dispensed with the obvious and obnoxious teaser headline, let’s drop the towel and expose Dominique Strauss-Kahn’s history of arrogant abuse. The truth is, the grandee of the IMF has molested Africans for years.

On Wednesday, the New York Times ran five – count’em, FIVE – stories on Strauss-Kahn, Director-General of the International Monetary Fund. According to the Paper of Record, the charges against “DSK,” as he’s known in France, are in “contradiction” to his “charm” and “accomplishments” at the IMF.

>Au contraire, mes chers lecteurs.

>Director-General DSK’s cruelty, arrogance and impunity toward African and other nations as generalissimo of the IMF is right in line with the story told by the poor, African hotel housekeeper in New York City.

Full Story Here: The Free Press — Independent News Media from Columbus, Ohio.

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How China Stiffs Its Creditors

Ian Fletcher :-:

I examined in a previous article the ethical case for America repudiating its financial obligations to China.  While considering this tempting possibility—which makes for a better bargaining position if nothing else—we should recall the fact that China has, in fact, repudiated its own financial obligations to other nations.

The key here is that the formerly (and still nominally) communist government in Beijing refused, upon taking control of the country in 1949, to honor the debts incurred by the previous government, the Nationalists of Chiang Kai-shek.

That previous government, like all governments, had a substantial public debt, and just like the U.S. today, much of it was owed to foreigners.

 

The amount at stake?  As these unpaid obligations have been accumulating for over sixty years now, it is now estimated to come to about $260 billion, mostly bonds. (Source

This repudiation didn’t exactly come as a surprise. At the time, the new government was sincerely communist, and these debts were regarded as the debts of an evil capitalist regime. Furthermore, they were owed to evil capitalists abroad, and if refusing to pay them caused financial hardship or chaos overseas, so much the better.

Unfortunately, international law doesn’t work that way.

If nations were permitted to repudiate their debts due to ideological differences with the previous government, we could wipe out our national debt every time Republicans replaced Democrats in Washington, or vice versa. Indeed, this is why debts are considered “national” debts in the first place: they are obligations of the nation itself, not of any particular group of politicians who happen to be ruling it at a given moment.

The flip side of this principle is, of course, that not only liabilities but also assets carry over from one regime to the next.  This includes everything from the typewriters in the nation’s embassy in Ruritania to the national territory itself.  (And, of course, it includes the money owed to the nation by foreigners.)

Beijing should remember that its claim to the territories of Tibet and Taiwan are based (however dubiously in Tibet’s case) upon historical claims predating the Communists’ seizure of power. But are those who repudiate history entitled to base claims upon it? Hmm…

No nation is entitled to have things both ways.  Either the People’s Republic of China is the successor state to Nationalist China, in which case it must honor the latter’s debts, or it isn’t, in which case it is not the legitimate government of the country, and we might as well go back to the curious era (1949-71) in which we regarded Taipei as the legitimate government of all China.

China is not, of course, the only nation to have welched on its international debts.  Russia did it in 1917, Cuba in 1961, and North Korea in 1964.

Conversely, any number of nations have gone through wrenching ideological transitions without repudiating their debts.  For example, South Africa’s government continues to honor the debts incurred by the apartheid state that preceded it. When the communist government of Russia fell in 1991, there followed a flurry of claims on its successor, which were worked out in various (not entirely satisfactory) ways.

There were partial settlements of some of China’s foreign debts in 1979, but this did not include the aforementioned $260 in bonds.  In 1987, the British did a deal with China concerning their share of the outstanding obligations, but this deal did not cover non-UK citizens. But in 2006, the Chinese Ministry of Finance formally informed the U.S. government that it was not willing to repay the rest of China’s outstanding obligations.

China’s debt repudiation has not, as one might imagine, receded into ancient history.  On July 17, 2008, the Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation and Trade of the House Committee on Foreign Relations held hearings on the matter. So it remains a quiet but live issue.  Bondholders seem to have long memories.

Distressingly,  there is also another very contemporary angle to this issue. The very same credit ratings agencies that approved billions of bad mortgage securities stand accused of complicity in China’s attempt to run from its financial past. There is a formal legal complaint outstanding with the U.S. Department of Justice antitrust division (viewable here) accusing these agencies of colluding with each other and Beijing to do this.

The significance for the present day is that  they stand accused of overstating the reliability of contemporary Chinese debt by, among other things, ignoring the government’s past unreliability.  (As we saw in the Asian Crisis of 1998, these agencies are quite capable of mis-rating governments.)  Given the scale of sovereign borrowing by the world’s second-largest economy, this may  not remain an abstract problem forever.

 

 

Ian Fletcher is Senior Economist of the Coalition for a Prosperous America, a nationwide grass-roots organization dedicated to fixing America’s trade policies and comprising representatives from business, agriculture, and labor. He was previously Research Fellow at the U.S. Business and Industry Council, a Washington think tank, and before that, an economist in private practice serving mainly hedge funds and private equity firms. Educated at Columbia University and the University of Chicago, he lives in San Francisco. He is the author of Free Trade Doesn’t Work: What Should Replace It and Why.

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Spain: Massive Crowds Defy Ban on Protests

 

 

Tens of thousands of people are defying a pre-election ban on demonstrations and protesting unemployment in squares around Spain in defiance of an order to quit at midnight.

The government avoided saying if it would order police to break up the crowds on Saturday, but at the stroke of midnight officers kept a discreet presence on the edges of the demonstrations.

Demonstrators kept quiet as city clocks chimed the beginning of a new day, many with sticky tape over their mouths in a gesture organizers said suggested they have things to say but were being gagged by the ban.

Full Story Here: Spain: Massive Crowds Defy Ban on Protests | Common Dreams.

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Spain Protests Rock Nation, Tens Of Thousands Fill The Cities Over Joblessness

 

 

Tens of thousands of Spaniards angry over joblessness protested for a sixth day on Friday in cities all over the country, and the government looked unlikely to enforce a ban on the demonstrations, fearing clashes.

Dubbed “los indignados” (the indignant), tens of thousands of protesters have filled the main squares of Spain’s cities for six days, in a wave of outrage over economic stagnation and government austerity marking a shift after years of patience.

The electoral board ruled on Thursday that protests would be illegal on Saturday, the eve of elections when Spaniards will choose 8,116 city councils and 13 out of 17 regional governments.

Full Story Here: Spain Protests Rock Nation, Tens Of Thousands Fill The Cities Over Joblessness.

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Greek Prime Minister Papandreou Rejects Debt Restructuring

 

 

Greece must avoid debt restructuring and push on with budget cuts and privatisations to overcome its debt crisis, the country’s Prime Minister George Papandreou and senior ECB officials said on Saturday.

Papandreou must present a fiscal plan next week that is credible enough for the European Union and the International Monetary Fund to continue bankrolling his debt-laden country.

But a large majority of Greeks reject more austerity, according to a poll published on Saturday, which also shows the ruling socialists losing their lead versus the conservative opposition for the first time since their 2009 election victory.

Full Story Here: Greek Prime Minister Papandreou Rejects Debt Restructuring.

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Iceland Volcano: Grimsvotn Ash Shuts Airport, Flights Canceled

 

 

 

 

Iceland closed its main international airport and canceled all domestic flights Sunday as a powerful volcanic eruption sent a plume of ash, smoke and steam 12 miles (20 kilometers) into the air.

The eruption of the Grimsvotn volcano was far larger than one a year ago at another Icelandic volcano that upended travel plans for 10 million people around the world, but scientists said it was unlikely to have the same widespread effect.

University of Iceland geophysicist Magnus Tumi Gudmundsson said this eruption, which began Saturday, was Grimsvotn’s largest eruption for 100 years.

Full Story Here: Iceland Volcano: Grimsvotn Ash Shuts Airport, Flights Canceled.

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Japan left with no choice but to widen nuke evacuation zone

 

 

JAPAN has started the first evacuations of homes outside a government exclusion zone after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami crippled one of the country’s nuclear power plants.

About 4000 residents of Iidate-mura village and 1100 people in Kawamata-cho town, in the quake-hit northeast, began the phased relocations to public housing, hotels and other facilities in nearby cities.

Their communities are outside the 20km radius from the Fukushima Daiichi power plant, officially designated as an area of forced evacuation due to health risks from the radiation seeping from the ageing and damaged plant.

Full Story Here: Japan left with no choice but to widen nuke evacuation zone | Herald Sun.

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IMF Head’s Arrest Casts Shadow On Greek Bailout Meeting

 

 

The arrest of IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn complicates a key European meeting on whether to give Greece billions more in aid – but experts insisted one man’s troubles won’t keep the 17 eurozone nations from trying to contain a debt crisis that threatens them all.

Eurozone financial leaders are to discuss Greece’s deteriorating economy Monday at a Brussels meeting where experts will brief them on the situation in Athens. Key questions include what conditions to put on more help to the debt-strapped nation, with European leaders unhappy at what they see as limited Greek efforts to raise money by selling government property.

Strauss-Kahn was arrested Sunday in New York on suspicion of sexual assault on a hotel maid.

Despite the arrest, the International Monetary Fund said in a statement it remains “fully functioning and operational.” The IMF Executive Board convened an informal session Sunday and made Strauss-Kahn’s deputy, John Lipsky, acting managing director while its chief was unavailable.

Full Story Here: IMF Head’s Arrest Casts Shadow On Greek Bailout Meeting.

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Italy’s Great Nuclear Swindle

The Radioactive Dictatorship of Silvio Berlusconi

By MICHAEL LEONARDI

Naples.

Italy’s democracy is in tatters as Silvio Berlusconi and his ruling right-wing coalition work to block a citizen’s referendum that would repeal the decision of the Berlusconi government to return to nuclear energy production on the peninsula. Italy has not produced nuclear energy since 1990 and recent polls indicate that more than 75 % of Italians are opposed to nuclear energy production. The referendum in question is on the ballot for the 12th and 13th of June, although a recent call by the Berlusconi government for a one year moratorium on the relaunch of nuclear energy in Italy threatens to push the referendum off the ballot through a last minute legal ruling. The campaign to bring this referendum to a vote was spearheaded by opposition political party Italia Dei Valori (Italy of Values) which led a broad based coalition of citizen and environmental groups to gather the 500,000 signatures needed to get the referendum on the ballot.

Italy is the only G8 country that does not produce nuclear energy. It has been free of functioning nuclear power plants since 1990 but does receive around 10% of its electricity from nuclear energy generated in France and Germany. Citizens successfully passed a referendum in 1987, one year after the catastrophic Chernobyl accident, that called for the phasing out and suspension of nuclear energy production. In 1987 Italy had two operating nuclear plants and has had four operational reactors in its history. In 2007 while campaigning for his third election, Berlusconi announced his intentions to return to nuclear energy production in Italy as a strategic part of a national energy policy.

Full Story Here: Michael Leonardi: Italy’s Great Nuclear Swindle.

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Thousands Rally in Japan Against Nuclear Power

 

 

Thousands of people rallied in Japan Saturday to demand a shift away from nuclear power after an earthquake and tsunami sparked the world’s worst atomic crisis since Chernobyl a quarter-century ago.

Braving spring drizzle, thousands of demonstrators gathered at a park in Tokyo’s Shibuya district, many holding hand-made banners reading: “Nuclear is old!” and “We want a shift in energy policy!”

The protest came a day after Prime Minister Naoto Kan called a halt to operations at a nuclear plant southwest of Tokyo because it is near a tectonic faultline, fearing a disaster like that which hit the Fukushima Daiichi plant in March.

Full Story Here: Thousands Rally in Japan Against Nuclear Power | Common Dreams.

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The Assassination of Osama Bin Laden

Fueling Hatred and Revenge

By FIDEL CASTRO

Those persons who deal with these issues know that on September 11 of 2001 our people expressed its solidarity to the US people and offered the modest cooperation that in the area of health we could have offered to the victims of the brutal attack against the Twin Towers in New York.

We also immediately opened our country’s airports to the American airplanes that were unable to land anywhere, given the chaos that came about soon after the strike.

The traditional stand adopted by the Cuban Revolution, which was always opposed to any action that could jeopardize the life of civilians, is well known.

Although we resolutely supported the armed struggle against Batista’s tyranny, we were, on principle, opposed to any terrorist action that could cause the death of innocent people. Such behavior, which has been maintained for more than half a century, gives us the right to express our views about such a sensitive matter.

Full Story Here: Fidel Castro: The Assassination of Osama Bin Laden.

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Mexico Prepares for Massive National Protest on May 8

Next Sunday May 8, 2011, Mexican citizens will march to demand the end to the “War on Drugs” and the removal of all government officials responsible for more than 35,000 deaths and the increase of insecurity and corruption.

Mexican poet Javier Sicilia, who became the leading voice of the discontent towards the government’s method of tackling the drug trafficking problem after his son Juan Francisco was killed, is inviting all those who want ‘peace and justice’ to join the protests next Sunday.

Here is Javier Sicilia’s message in English:

Full Story Here: Mexico Prepares for Massive National Protest on May 8 · Global Voices.

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Canada’s cold new dawn


Conservative prime minister Stephen Harper is our version of George W Bush, minus the warmth and intellect

Canada woke up to an election shock this morning. It was a self-inflicted jolt, and all the more painful for that. After three minority governments in seven years – all following inconclusive, forgettable elections that never gave the Conservatives the solid majority they were sweating for – a man of the hard right named Stephen Harper finally has his win.

He triumphed over Michael Ignatieff – known to the British as a fine writer, historian and BBC talking head – who had returned to Canada to lead the Liberals, often described as the country’s traditional party of government. Instead, Ignatieff got whacked, and the left-leaning New Democratic party did very well indeed, astonishing even themselves. To put this in British terms, the Liberals (New Labour) were humiliated, the New Democrats (the Liberal Democrats) came in a powerful second and a Canadian version of George W Bush, minus the warmth and intellect, is now prime minister.

What happens now is the full-scale Americanisation of Canada, hinted at over the past seven years by Harper – he fired people who talked too loudly about this – but not acted upon because Canadians have always valued their distinctiveness from the angry country in decline south of the border.

Full Story Here: Canada’s cold new dawn | Heather Mallick | Comment is free | The Guardian.

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Canada vote dominated by left-leaning third-party surge

Canada vote dominated by left-leaning third-party surge A third-party surge has unsettled the status quo as Canada prepares to go to the polls on Monday.

OTTAWA — A third-party surge has unsettled the status quo as Canada prepares to go to the polls on Monday, with Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper seeking an ever-elusive majority government.

The run-up to Canada’s fourth election in seven years has been dominated by speculation over how the surging support in opinion polls for the left-leaning New Democratic Party (NDP) will play out.

Full Story Here: ccokzsblog: Canada vote dominated by left-leaning third-party surge.

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Video: TEPCO’s President Visits An Evacuation Center

TEPCO president Masataka Shimizu visited an evacuation shelter for the first time on Friday. Tens of thousands of Japanese living within 19 miles of his nuclear plant have been required to evacuate and are now living in cardboard cubicles. It’s not known when they can return.

Masataka Shimizu is about as popular as Tony Hayward on the Gulf Coast.

People shouted out: “Why don’t you try living here!” “Tell us when we can go home!” according to Yomiuri.

One man told him: “Think about what you would do if this was happening to your family. Think about this when you are trying to resolve the problem. Please.”

Full Story Here: Video: TEPCO’s President Visits An Evacuation Center.

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Japan’s nuke workers reaching their limit, warns doctor

Workers battling the crisis at Japan’s stricken nuclear plant suffer from insomnia, show signs of dehydration and high blood pressure and are at risk of developing depression or heart trouble, according to a doctor who met with them.

The crews have been fighting to get the radiation-spewing Fukushima Dai-ichi plant under control since it was crippled by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami that devastated northeastern Japan.

“The conditions at the plant remain harsh,” epidemiologist Takeshi Tanigawa told The Associated Press. “I am afraid that if this continues we will see a growing risk of health problems.”

Full Story Here: Japan’s nuke workers reaching their limit, warns doctor – Japan disaster – NZ Herald News.

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TEPCO: Fuel of the Fukushima plant No. 1 reactor could be melting

 

 

Fuel of the Fukushima nuke plant plant’s No. 1 reactor could be melting, an official said on Wednesday at Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) , the operator of the crippled plant.

TEPCO said last week some of the spent nuclear fuel rods stored in the No. 4 reactor building of the Fukushima Daiichi power plant were damaged.

The company’s workers have put iRobot PackBots to measure radiation, oxygen and temperature inside the reactor.

TEPCO announced plans on Monday to take about 10,000 cubic meters of contaminated water from the reactor unit 2, and move it to a treatment plant that will be built on site.

Full Story Here: TEPCO: Fuel of the Fukushima plant No. 1 reactor could be melting – International Business Times.

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Fukushima Plant Operator Announces Plan To End Crisis

 

The operator of the crippled nuclear power plant leaking radiation in northern Japan announced a plan Sunday to bring the crisis under control within six to nine months and allow some evacuated residents to return to their homes.

But officials stressed the roadmap for ending the crisis at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant was only a first step, that conditions remain unstable, and that it remains unclear when the government will let evacuees go back.

Prime Minister Naoto Kan, facing pressure both at home and abroad to resolve Japan’s worst-ever nuclear power accident, directed Tokyo Electric Power Co. to draw up the plan.

Full Story Here: Japan Nuclear Crisis: Fukushima Plant Operator Announces Plan To End Crisis.

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China imposes de facto ban on Japanese food imports

China has effectively halted the import of all food and agricultural products from Japan due to concerns over radiation contamination, despite ostensibly only banning such items from 12 prefectures of eastern Japan, sources familiar with Sino-Japanese relations said Friday.

China’s General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine has since April 8 been requiring that importers of food and agricultural products provide it with documents issued by the Japanese government when applying for quality inspection and quarantine at customhouses across China, including certificates for radioactivity-free inspection and for places of origin.

But Japan currently has no central government agencies that issue such documents.

Full Story Here: China imposes de facto ban on Japanese food imports: sources – The Mainichi Daily News.

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Radiation leak feared at nuke plant, people urged to stay indoors

 

 

The crisis at the quake-hit Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant reached a critical phase Tuesday with radiation feared to have leaked after apparent hydrogen blasts at two more reactors, triggering growing fears of widespread contamination.

Prime Minister Naoto Kan urged people living between 20 and 30 kilometers of the plant to stay indoors, after radiation equivalent to 400 times the level to which people can safely be exposed in one year was detected near the No. 3 reactor in the plant.

Residents within a 20-km radius have already been ordered to vacate the area following Saturday’s hydrogen blast at the plant’s No. 1 reactor.

Full Story Here: Radiation leak feared at nuke plant, people urged to stay indoors | Kyodo News.

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Japan to raise Fukushima crisis level to worst: Level 7

The Japanese government’s nuclear safety agency has decided to raise the crisis level of the Fukushima Daiichi power plant accident from 5 to 7, the worst on the international scale.

The Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency made the decision on Monday. It says the damaged facilities have been releasing a massive amount of radioactive substances, which are posing a threat to human health and the environment over a wide area.

The agency used the International Nuclear and Radiological Event Scale, or INES, to gauge the level. The scale was designed by an international group of experts to indicate the significance of nuclear events with ratings of 0 to 7.

On March 18th, one week after the massive quake, the agency declared the Fukushima trouble a level 5 incident, the same as the accident at Three Mile Island in the United States in 1979.

Full Story Here: NHK WORLD English.

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Japan nuclear crisis may be on par with Chernobyl

Japan is considering raising the severity level of its nuclear crisis to put it on a par with the Chernobyl accident 25 years ago, the worst atomic power disaster in history, Kyodo news agency reported today (NZ time).

The report came as the government expanded an evacuation zone around the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant because of the high levels of accumulated radiation since a 15-metre tsunami ripped through the complex a month ago, causing massive damage to its reactors which engineers are still struggling to control.

The Kyodo report said that the high levels of radiation that have been released by the Fukushima Daiichi plant meant it could raise the severity level from 5 to the highest 7, the same as the 1986 Chernobyl accident.

Full Story Here: Japan nuclear crisis may be on par with Chernobyl | Stuff.co.nz.

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As One-Month Tsunami Anniversary Approaches, Japan’s Nuclear Fears Far From Over

In the Japanese city of Minamisoma, just 18 kilometers from the Fukushima nuclear power plant, the Tsunakawa family has returned to retrieve pets and other belongings from their home.

The family was forced to flee after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami damaged the Fukushima plant, causing radiation leaks and rendering their town and others nearby part of a nuclear evacuation area.

Minamisoma looks like a dead zone, with police in protective suits continuing to search for bodies of people killed in the disaster. The Tsunakawas are one of the few families to risk a trip back to their homes.

Sadamu Tsunakawa, who is 62, has been living with his wife in an evacuation center north of the evacuation zone. But he says he is hopeful he can soon return to his home for good.

Full Story Here: As One-Month Tsunami Anniversary Approaches, Japan’s Nuclear Fears Far From Over | Common Dreams.

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Fukushima Radioactive Dumping Continues

Japan fails to stop radioactive discharge into ocean

TOKYO (Reuters) – Japanese nuclear power plant operator TEPCO expects to stop pumping radioactive water into the ocean on Monday, days later than planned, a step that would help ease international concern about the spread of radiation from a smashed nuclear plant.

Prime Minister Naoto Kan’s Democratic Party was likely to be punished at Sunday’s local polls for his handling of the massive earthquake and tsunami that ravaged Japan’s northeastern coast on March 11, killing 13,000 and triggering the world’s worst nuclear accident since the 1986 Chernobyl disaster.

Full Story Here: Fukushima Radioactive Dumping Continues | Kmareka.com.

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Iceland Again Rejects Debt Deal To Repay UK, Dutch

 

 

Voters in Iceland have rejected a government-approved deal to repay Britain and the Netherlands $5 billion for their citizens’ deposits in the failed online bank Icesave, referendum results showed Sunday.

With about 90 percent of the votes counted, the “no” side had 59.1 percent of the votes and the “yes” side 40.9 percent.

The result reflects Icelanders’ anger at having to pay for the excesses of their bankers, and complicates the country’s recovery from its 2008 economic collapse.

Full Story Here: Iceland Again Rejects Debt Deal To Repay UK, Dutch.

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Egyptian soldiers attack Tahrir Square protesters


At least two people killed in pre-dawn raid on protesters calling for trial of Mubarak and removal of army chief

Egypt‘s deepening political crisis following the ousting of President Hosni Mubarak has taken a dangerous new turn after soldiers armed with clubs and rifles stormed protesters occupying Cairo’s Tahrir Square in a pre-dawn raid, killing at least two.

The demonstrators, angry at the slow progress of reform since the country’s 18-day revolution earlier this year, had been demanding the trial of Mubarak, his son Gamal and close associates, and an immediate transition from military to civilian rule.

The rally revealed the increasing impatience and mistrust that many Egyptians feel towards the military, which took over when Mubarak was forced out of office on 11 February. Some protesters accuse the top brass of protecting the former leader.

Full Story Here: Egyptian soldiers attack Tahrir Square protesters | World news | guardian.co.uk.

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Fraud and death in Indonesia

FOR a week now, Jakarta’s rich and connected have been appalled by twin scandals at Citibank’s Indonesia operations. A relationship manager at the bank’s wealth management division appears to have stolen Rp. 17 billion ($2m) from clients. In what must be a terrible coincidence, Citibank debt collectors also seem to have killed a customer—a local politician, it turns out—who disputed his credit card bill.

The Financial Times piece linked above focuses on the $2m fraud, presumably because embezzlement tends to have higher material impact to earnings, but the recent murder at Citi’s premises is arguably more damaging to the bank’s reputation. According to Irzen Okta, his bill was Rp. 48 million (around $5,500) but Citi claims the actual figure was Rp. 100 million. Mr Okta went to contest the bill at Citi’s premises but, after a seemingly grisly interrogation—the press has fixated on blood-stained curtains—he did not return.

Thuggish debt collection has been a fact of life in Indonesia since at least the 9th century, when Javanese creditors enslaved defaulters, but the central bank came off as sublimely callous last week when it washed its hands of such abuses. Budi Rochadi, a deputy governor at Bank Indonesia, said that current laws prevent the central bank from regulating debt collectors but that it had always urged banks to be ethical. This is weak, weak tea. Banks have incentives to hire the toughest debt collectors, who, in turn, are judged by how much money they can recover. Unless the central bank penalises those who break the rules, abuses continue.

Full Story Here: Financial markets: Fraud and death in Indonesia | The Economist.

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10 Everyday Acts of Resistance That Changed the World

Václav Havel called it “the power of the powerless.” How regular people, from Denmark to Liberia, have stood up to power—and won.

The Arab spring of 2011 has already changed the region and the world. Ordinary people have lost their fear and shattered the perception that their rulers are invincible. Whatever happens next, the changes across the region in the first few months of 2011 will prove historic.

n Tunisia, the now famous “jasmine revolution” began with protests in December, triggered by the self-immolation of a 26-year-old vegetable seller, Mohammed Bouazizi. Bouazizi, remembered by his younger sister Basma as “funny and generous,” could finally take no more of the official harassment and humiliation meted out to him.

Four weeks of protests, fueled by Facebook and other social media networks, concluded with the unthinkable: Zine el Abidine Ben Ali, president for the past 23 years, fled the country.

Full Story Here:  10 Everyday Acts of Resistance That Changed the World by Steve Crawshaw and John Jackson — YES! Magazine.

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Japan eyes new radiation standards that could widen evacuation zone

apan may set standards for long-term radiation exposure that would effectively extend the evacuation zone around the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, a top government official said Thursday, as a strong new aftershock rattled the area

Government readings show that people beyond the current restricted zone may be exposed to dangerous long-term doses of radiation even though the readings fall below levels that now require an evacuation, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano said.

“It is the time for the government to consider setting another category for accumulated exposure,” Edano, the government’s point man on the crisis, told reporters Thursday evening. “The safety of the people is the first priority, and social needs come after that.”

Full Story Here: Japan eyes new radiation standards that could widen evacuation zone – CNN.com.

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‘Unprecedented’ level of violence in Mexico: FBI

Using unusually blunt language, FBI Director Robert Mueller told US legislators on Capitol Hill Wednesday that there is an “unprecedented” level of violence in Mexico linked to the country’s drug wars.

“I would not call it a full-scale war,” Mueller told members of the House of Representatives as he discussed his agency’s 2012 budget.

“I would say there are full-scale warring factions that utilize homicide as a mechanism of retaliation, staking out one’s turf, retribution, that have contributed substantially to the number of deaths in Mexico,” Mueller said.

There have been some 35,000 homicides in the past four years, Mueller said.

Full Story Here: ‘Unprecedented’ level of violence in Mexico: FBI | The Raw Story.

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Radiation From Japan’s Damaged Nuclear Plant Off the Charts

Workers at Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant are being exposed to levels of radiation so high that monitoring devices are useless, a worker measuring radiation at the plant told NHK television today.

 

 

No one can enter the Unit 1, 2, and 3 reactor buildings at the power plant because radiation levels are so high, he said, adding that pools and streams of water contaminated by high-level radiation are being found throughout the plant, crippled by a killer earthquake and tsunami March 11.

The plant’s operator, Tokyo Electric Power Company, says 7.5 million times the legal limit of radioactive iodine 131 has been detected from samples of seawater near the plant in the Pacific Ocean off the northeast coast of Honshu island.

While iodine 131 has a short half life of eight days and will decay away in 16 days, Monday’s sample also contained 1.1 million times the legal limit of cesium 137, which has a half life of 30

Full Story Here: Radiation From Japan’s Damaged Nuclear Plant Off the Charts.

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Fukushima Daiichi Reactors 5-6 Stability Under Threat

Video – TEPCO official cries giving news

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Engineers fail to seal leak at Japan nuke plant

 

 

Engineers failed to seal a crack where highly radioactive water was spilling into the Pacific from a Japanese nuclear power plant incapacitated by last month’s earthquake-spawned tsunami but said a search of the site found no other leaks Sunday.

The wave has carved a path of destruction up and down the coast and is believed to have killed 25,000 people. The first deaths at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant itself, though, were confirmed Sunday by the operator. A 21-year-old and a 24-year-old were believed to be conducting regular checks at the complex when the 9.0-magnitude earthquake hit March 11.

“It pains me that these two young workers were trying to protect the power plant while being hit by the earthquake and tsunami,” Tokyo Electric Power Co. Chairman Tsunehisa Katsumata said in a statement.

Full Story Here: Excite News – Engineers fail to seal leak at Japan nuke plant.

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Japan nuclear struggle focuses on cracked reactor pit

Japanese officials grappling on Sunday to end the world’s worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl were focussing on a crack in a concrete pit that was leaking radiation into the ocean from a crippled reactor.

Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO) said it had found a crack in the pit at its No.2 reactor in Fukushima, generating readings 1,000 millisieverts of radiation per hour in the air inside the pit.

“With radiation levels rising in the seawater near the plant, we have been trying to confirm the reason why, and in that context, this could be one source,” said Hidehiko Nishiyama, deputy head of the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA), said on Saturday.

He cautioned, however: “We can’t really say for certain until we’ve studied the results.” <

 

Full Story Here: Japan nuclear struggle focuses on cracked reactor pit | Reuters.

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TEPCO recruiting nuclear workers for up to $5,000 per day

What would you do for $2,500 a day? How about $5,000 a day? Do you have “a passport, a family willing to let you go”, and a “willingness to to work in a radioactive zone”? Then you could have what it takes to work at the Fukushima nuclear power plant, and even become a “jumper”, a highly paid individual who rushes into a radioactive area, performs a task, and quickly returns to safety before absorbing a dangerous dose of radioactivity.

Reuters is reporting that TEPCO, the Tokyo Electric Power Company which owns the Fukushima Dai-Ichi nuclear plant, is offering workers exorbitant amounts of money in a bid to persuade them to help stabilize the reactors damaged in the March earthquake and tsunami. Some workers report being offered 200,000 yen ($2,500) a day, for what amounts to only an hour of work on the reactor.

“Ordinarily I’d consider that a dream job, but my wife was in tears and stopped me, so I declined,” said (an) unidentified worker who is in his 30s, “The working time would be less than an hour, so in fact it was 200,000 yen an hour, but the risk was too big.”

Full Story Here: TEPCO recruiting nuclear workers for up to $5,000 per day | The Raw Story.

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Groundwater at nuclear plant ‘highly’ radiation-contaminated: TEPCO

More signs of serious radiation contamination in and near the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant were detected Thursday, with the latest data finding groundwater containing radioactive iodine 10,000 times the legal threshold and the concentration of radioactive iodine-131 in nearby seawater rising to the highest level yet.

Radioactive material was confirmed from groundwater for the first time since the March 11 quake and tsunami hit the nuclear power plant on the Pacific coast, knocking out the reactors’ key cooling functions. An official of the plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. said, ”We’re aware this is an extremely high figure.”

The contaminated groundwater was found from around the No. 1 reactor’s turbine building, although the radiation level of groundwater is usually so low that it cannot be measured.

Full Story Here: Groundwater at nuclear plant ‘highly’ radiation-contaminated: TEPCO | Kyodo News.

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Revealed: Gaddafi envoy in Britain for secret talks


Exclusive: Contact with senior aide believed to be one of a number between Libyan officials and west amid signs regime may be looking for exit strategy

Colonel Gaddafi’s regime has sent one of its most trusted envoys to London for confidential talks with British officials, the Guardian can reveal.

Mohammed Ismail, a senior aide to Gaddafi’s son Saif al-Islam, visited London in recent days, British government sources familiar with the meeting have confirmed. The contacts with Ismail are believed to have been one of a number between Libyan officials and the west in the last fortnight, amid signs that the regime may be looking for an exit strategy.

Disclosure of Ismail’s visit comes in the immediate aftermath of the defection to Britain of Moussa Koussa, Libya’s foreign minister and its former external intelligence head, who has been Britain’s main conduit to the Gaddafi regime since the early 1990s.

Full Story Here: Revealed: Gaddafi envoy in Britain for secret talks | World news | The Guardian.

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USAID Administrator: GOP Budget Cuts Would Lead To The Deaths Of 70,000 Children Globally

 

 

Yesterday, the House Committee on Appropriations Subcommittee on State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs held a budget hearing on the US Agency for International Development (USAID), the primary agency in the government responsible for dispensing humanitarian aid and assisting global development efforts.

As Foreign Policy’s Josh Rogin notes, one moment of the hearing provided a particularly startling fact about H.R. 1, the House Republicans’ bill for continuing appropriations to fund the government. USAID administrator Rajiv Shah explained to Rep. Charlie Dent (R-PA) that the agency was committed to its mission of battling global poverty, but that H.R. 1 would severely gut its ability to battle easily preventable deaths among children — and even lead to the deaths of as many as 70,000 kids globally. Dent, apparently unmoved by Shah’s testimony, immediately asked to change the subject:

Full Story Here: ThinkProgress » USAID Administrator: GOP Budget Cuts Would Lead To The Deaths Of 70,000 Children Globally.

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Japan Earthquake: before and after

Aerial photos taken over Japan have revealed the scale of devastation across dozens of suburbs and tens of thousands of homes and businesses.

Hover over each satellite photo to view the devastation caused by the earthquake and tsunami.

Full Story Here: ABC News – Japan Earthquake: before and after.

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Japan Nuclear Crisis: Setbacks Mount In Leaking Plant

 

 

Setbacks mounted Wednesday in the crisis over Japan’s tsunami-damaged nuclear facility, with nearby seawater testing at its highest radiation levels yet and the president of the plant operator checking into a hospital with hypertension.

Nearly three weeks after a March 11 tsunami engulfed the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant, knocking out power to the cooling system that keeps nuclear fuel rods from overheating, Tokyo Electric Power Co. is still struggling to bring the facility in northeastern Japan under control.

Radiation leaking from the plant has seeped into the soil and seawater nearby and made its way into produce, raw milk and even tap water as far as Tokyo, 140 miles (220 kilometers) to the south.

Full Story Here: Japan Nuclear Crisis: Setbacks Mount In Leaking Plant.

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Level of iodine-131 in seawater off the chart – Contamination Spreading

Contamination 1,250 times above maximum limit

The level of radioactive iodine detected in seawater near the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant was 1,250 times above the maximum level allowable, the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency said Saturday, suggesting contamination from the reactors is spreading.

Meanwhile, plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. turned on the lights in the control room of the No. 2 reactor the same day, and was analyzing and trying to remove pools of water containing radioactive materials in the turbine buildings of reactors 1 to 3.

The iodine-131 in the seawater was detected at 8:30 a.m. Friday, about 330 meters south of the plant’s drain outlets. Previously, the highest amount recorded was about 100 times above the permitted level.

Full Story Here: Level of iodine-131 in seawater off chart | The Japan Times Online.

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Japan nuke workers grapple with radioactive water

Workers grappled Sunday with how to remove and store highly radioactive water pooling in three troubled units at a nuclear power plant in northeastern Japan that has been leaking radiation making its way into food and water.

    The discovery of puddles with radiation levels 10,000 times the norm sparked a temporary evacuation of the Fukushima Dai-ichi power plant on Thursday. Two workers who stepped into the water were hospitalized with possible burns.

    The development set back feverish efforts to start up a crucial cooling system knocked out in a massive March 11 earthquake and tsunami, but has helped experts get closer to determining the source of the dangerous leak.

    Full Story Here: Excite News – Japan nuke workers grapple with radioactive water.

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    London Protests Gather Strength After Massive Budget Cuts Announced

     

     

    More than 250,000 people took to London’s streets to protest the toughest spending cuts since World War II – one of the largest demonstrations since the Iraq war – as riot police clashed with a small groups. More than 200 people were arrested.

    Although most of Saturday’s demonstration was peaceful, clashes continued into the night as dozens of protesters pelted officers with bottles and amonia-filled lightbulbs. Groups set several fires and smashed shop windows near tourist landmarks such as Trafalgar Square.

    Teachers, nurses, firefighters, public sector workers, students, pensioners and campaign groups all took part in Saturday’s mass demonstration.

    Full Story Here: London Protests Gather Strength After Massive Budget Cuts Announced.

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    Huge Radiation Spike At Fukushima Nuclear Plant An Error, Japan Officials Say

     

     

    Emergency workers struggling to pump contaminated water from Japan’s stricken nuclear complex fled from one of the troubled reactors Sunday after reporting a huge increase in radioactivity – a spike that officials later apologetically said was inaccurate.

    The apology came after employees fled the complex’s Unit 2 reactor when a reading showed radiation levels had reached 10 million times higher than normal in the reactor’s cooling system. Officials said they were so high that the worker taking the measurements had withdrawn before taking a second reading.

    On Sunday night, though, plant operators said that while the water was contaminated with radiation, the extremely high reading was a mistake.

    “The number is not credible,” said Tokyo Electric Power Co. spokesman Takashi Kurita. “We are very sorry.”

    Full Story Here: Huge Radiation Spike At Fukushima Nuclear Plant An Error, Japan Officials Say.

    OPS: So it’s “TRUST me guy, go on back in there…..” ? Really?

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    Japan’s government criticizes nuke plant operator

    SENDAI, Japan (AP) – Japan’s government revealed a series of missteps by the operator of a radiation-leaking nuclear plant on Saturday, including sending workers in without protective footwear in its faltering efforts to control a monumental crisis. The U.S. Navy, meanwhile, rushed to deliver fresh water to replace corrosive saltwater now being used in a desperate bid to cool the plant’s overheated reactors.

    Government spokesman Yukio Edano urged Tokyo Electric Power Co. to be more transparent, two days after two workers at the tsunami-damaged Fukushima Dai-ichi plant suffered skin burns when they stepped in water that was 10,000 times more radioactive than levels normally found near the reactors.

    “We strongly urge TEPCO to provide information to the government more promptly,” Edano said.

    The Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency, or NISA, said TEPCO was aware there was high radiation in the air at one of the plant’s six units several days before the accident…..

    Full Story Here: Excite News – Japan’s government criticizes nuke plant operator.

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    Germany Nuclear Power Protest Draws 200,000

     

     

    Tens of thousands of people on Saturday turned out in Germany’s largest cities to protest the use of nuclear power in the wake of Japan’s Fukushima reactor disaster, police and organizers said.

    In Berlin alone more than 100,000 took to the capital’s streets to urge Germany’s leaders to immediately abolish nuclear power, police spokesman Jens Berger said.

    Organizers said some 250,000 people marched at the “Fukushima Warns: Pull the Plug on all Nuclear Power Plants” rallies in the country’s four largest cities, making them the biggest anti-nuclear protest in the country’s history.

    “We can no longer afford bearing the risk of a nuclear catastrophe,” Germany’s environmental lobby group BUND said.

    Full Story Here: Germany Nuclear Power Protest Draws 200,000.

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    Seawater near Japan plant tests high for radiation

     

     

    Emergency workers continue efforts to stabilize the quake- and tsunami-riddled power plant

    U.S. naval barges loaded with freshwater sped toward Japan’s overheated nuclear plant on Saturday to help workers struggling to stem a worrying rise in radioactivity and remove dangerously contaminated water from the facility.

    Workers at the stricken Fukushima Dai-ichi plant have been using seawater in a frantic bid to stabilize reactors overheating since a tsunami knocked out the complex’s crucial cooling system March 11, but fears are mounting about the corrosive nature of the salt in the water.

    Plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. is now rushing to inject the reactors with freshwater instead to prevent pipes from clogging and to begin extracting the radioactive water, Hidehiko Nishiyama of Japan’s Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency said Saturday.

    Full Story Here: Seawater near Japan plant tests high for radiation – Japan Earthquake – Salon.com.

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    Nuclear situation ‘grave and serious’

    The situation at Japan’s crippled nuclear complex in Fukushima 240km north of Toky remains “grave and serious,” prime minister Naoto Kan said today.

    In a televised address Mr Kan warned that “we are not in a position where we can be optimistic. We must treat every development with the utmost care”.

    He apologised to farmers and business owners around the plant for damage caused.

    Full Story Here: Nuclear situation ‘grave and serious’ – The Irish Times – Fri, Mar 25, 2011.

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    Fear and devastation on the road to Japan’s nuclear disaster zone

     

     

    Daniel Howden travels through a post-tsunami wasteland to the gates of the stricken Fukushima Daiichi power station

    Once this road was thronged with traffic: an expressway, one of the arteries of a nation’s economic life, as familiar and modern a sight as you would find anywhere in Japan. The only barriers on the route to Fukushima Daiichi were the other people heading in the same direction.

    Today the journey is different. It is a journey to the heart of a catastrophe. About 10 kilometres beyond the half-deserted city of Iwaki, the coastal road is blocked not by commuters but by landslides; the satellite navigation system that might once have flashed up traffic jams shows clusters of red circles that denote barred roads. And when we reach the inland expressway itself, the only vehicles disturbing the silence are the rumbling military trucks of Japan’s Self Defence Force. Twenty kilometres out from the nuclear plant, abandoned road blocks mutely signal our entry into the nuclear exclusion zone.

    It is a scene of devastation. Underneath us the road cuts across rice fields strewn with cars, their wreckages seemingly tossed by the hand of an angry child: in one paddy an upturned Nissan Micra; in another a Toyota people carrier filled to its sunroof with mud. The second storey of a nearby house perches on a single pillar, like a boxy flamingo. The ground floor has been erased, splinters of wood pointing the way the wall of water had gone.

    Full Story Here: Fear and devastation on the road to Japan’s nuclear disaster zone – Asia, World – The Independent.

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    Dangerous breach suspected at Fukushima

    “It is possible there may be damage somewhere in the reactor,” an official tells reporters

    A suspected breach in the reactor core at one unit of a stricken Fukushima nuclear plant could mean more serious radioactive contamination, Japanese officials said Friday, revealing what may prove a major setback in the mission to bring the leaking plant under control.

    The uncertain situation halted work Friday at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear complex, where dozens had been working feverishly to stop the overheated plant from leaking dangerous radiation, officials said.

    Suspicions of a possible breach were raised when two workers waded into water 10,000 times more radioactive than normal and suffered skin burns when the water splashed over their protective boots, the Nuclear and Industry Safety Agency said.

    Full Story Here: Dangerous breach suspected at Fukushima – Japan Earthquake – Salon.com.

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    Opposition topples Canadian government

    A no-confidence vote succeeded in triggering Canada’s 4th election in 7 years

    Opposition parties toppled Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s government in a no confidence vote, triggering Canada’s fourth election in seven years.

    The opposition parties held the Conservative government in contempt of Parliament on Friday for failing to disclose the full financial details of his tougher crime legislation, corporate tax cuts and plans to purchase stealth fighter jets.

    The vote, which will force the election probably on May 2, was 156-to-145.

    Full Story Here: Opposition topples Canadian government – Canada – Salon.com.

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    Full: Israel admits kidnapping operations manager of Gaza’s only power plant

     

     

    Israel admitted this week that it was behind the abduction of the operations manager of Gaza’s only power plant, who disappeared more than a month ago while travelling on a train in Ukraine.

    Israeli officials confirmed in a statement that Mr Dirar Abu Sisi, 42, was being held in Israel’s Shikma prison, near Ashkelon, after a judge partially lifted reporting restrictions late on Sunday. However, the explanation for Mr Abu Sisi’s abduction and detention are still covered by the gag order, which has been extended by a judge for 30 days.

    The whereabouts of Mr Abu Sisi, an engineer, had been the subject of intense speculation since he disappeared on February 18 travelling on a train to the Ukrainian capital, Kiev.

    Full Story Here: Full: Israel admits kidnapping operations manager of Gaza’s only power plant – The National.

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    New Problems Arise at Japanese Nuclear Plant

    The Japanese electricians who bravely strung wires this week to all six reactor buildings at a stricken nuclear power plant succeeded despite waves of heat and blasts of radioactive steam.

    The restoration of electricity at the plant, the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station, stirred hopes that the crisis was ebbing. But nuclear engineers say some of the most difficult and dangerous tasks are still ahead — and time is not necessarily on the side of the repair teams.

    The tasks include manually draining hundreds of gallons of radioactive water and venting radioactive gas from the pumps and piping of the emergency cooling systems, which are located diagonally underneath the overheated reactor vessels. The urgency of halting the spread of radioactive contamination from the site was underlined on Wednesday by the health warning that infants should not drink tap water — even in Tokyo, 140 miles southwest of the stricken plant — raised alarms about extensive contamination.

    Full Story Here: New Problems Arise at Japanese Nuclear Plant – NYTimes.com.

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    IAEA tracks radiation leaks at Japan’s crippled plant

    Japan‘s earthquake-hit nuclear complex is still emitting radiation but the source is unclear, a senior U.N. atomic agency official said, as workers faced another day of struggle on Wednesday to cool damaged reactor cores.

    The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) also raised concerns about a lack of information from Japanese authorities, as rising temperatures around the core of one reactor threatened to delay work.

    “We continue to see radiation coming from the site … and the question is where exactly is that coming from?” James Lyons, a senior official of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), told a news conference in Vienna on Tuesday.

    Despite hopes of progress in the world’s worst nuclear crisis in a quarter of a century, triggered by an earthquake and tsunami that left at least 21,000 people dead or missing, plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO) said it needed more time before it could say the reactors were stabilized.

    Full Story Here: IAEA tracks radiation leaks at Japan’s crippled plant | Reuters.

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    Workers Flee Japan Nuclear Plant As Smoke Rises


    Officials raced Monday to restore electricity to Japan’s leaking nuclear plant, but getting the power flowing will hardly be the end of their battle: With its mangled machinery and partly melted reactor cores, bringing the complex under control is a monstrous job that is anything but a quick-fix.

    Restoring the power to all six units at the tsunami-damaged complex is key, because it will, in theory, power up the maze of motors, valves and switches that help deliver cooling water to the overheated reactor cores and spent fuel pools that are leaking radiation.

    Ideally, officials believe it should only take a day to get the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear under control once the cooling system is up and running. In reality, the effort to end the crisis is likely to take weeks.

    Full Story Here: Workers Flee Japan Nuclear Plant As Smoke Rises.

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    Workers Flee Japan Nuclear Plant As Smoke Rises

     

     

    Officials raced Monday to restore electricity to Japan’s leaking nuclear plant, but getting the power flowing will hardly be the end of their battle: With its mangled machinery and partly melted reactor cores, bringing the complex under control is a monstrous job that is anything but a quick-fix.

    Restoring the power to all six units at the tsunami-damaged complex is key, because it will, in theory, power up the maze of motors, valves and switches that help deliver cooling water to the overheated reactor cores and spent fuel pools that are leaking radiation.

    Ideally, officials believe it should only take a day to get the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear under control once the cooling system is up and running. In reality, the effort to end the crisis is likely to take weeks.

    Full Story Here: Workers Flee Japan Nuclear Plant As Smoke Rises.

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    Gadhafi vows ‘long war’ after US, allies strike

     

     

    A defiant Moammar Gadhafi vowed a “long war” after the U.S. and European militaries blasted his forces with airstrikes and over 100 cruise missiles early Sunday, hitting air defenses and at least two major air bases and shaking the Libyan capital with explosions and anti-aircraft fire.

    Despite the strikes, Gadhafi’s troops lashed back, bombarding the rebel-held city of Misrata with artillery and tanks on Sunday, the opposition reported.

    In the overnight barrage, ship-fired Tomahawk cruise missiles and bombs and missiles from an international arsenal of warplanes including American B-2 stealth bombers and F-15 and F-16 fighter-bombers rained down on Libyan targets — including ground forces — in the widest international military effort since the Iraq war. The air assault came as Gadhafi’s overwhelming firepower was threatening to crush the month-old rebellion against his 41-year rule. State television said 48 people were killed in the strikes.

    Full Story Here: Gadhafi vows ‘long war’ after US, allies strike – Yahoo! News.

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    Japan: Renewed nuclear chain reaction feared at spent-fuel storage pool,

    .Status of Fukushima nuclear power plants Sunday midnight

    The following is the known status as of Sunday evening of each of the six reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant and the four reactors at the Fukushima Daini plant, both in Fukushima Prefecture, which were crippled by the magnitude 9.0 earthquake and ensuing tsunami on March 11.

    …snip…

    – Reactor No. 4 (Under maintenance when quake struck)

    Renewed nuclear chain reaction feared at spent-fuel storage pool, fire at building housing containment of reactor Tuesday and Wednesday, only frame remains of reactor building roof, temperature in the pool reached 84 C on March 14, water sprayed at pool on Sunday.

    Full Story Here: Status of Fukushima nuclear power plants Sunday midnight | Kyodo News.

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    Murdoch’s papers busted hacking phones of liberal politicians – Looses in court

    Met must hand over News of the World phone-hacking evidence

    Police must pass documents seized from Glenn Mulcaire to lawyers representing growing number of people suing paper

    The growing number of public figures suing the News of the World won a major high court victory when a judge said Scotland Yard must hand over a mass of phone-hacking evidence that has never before been disclosed.

    The ruling by Justice Geoffrey Vos, who was appointed this week to handle the 14 phone-hacking cases currently going through the courts, means the Metropolitan police will be forced to pass reams of documents seized from Glenn Mulcaire, the private investigator who worked for the News of the World, to lawyers acting for the politicians, celebrities and football figures who are suing the paper. They include Sienna Miller, Paul Gascoigne, Steve Coogan and the former culture secretary Tessa Jowell.

    Vos ruled on Friday that the Met must give unredacted documents – including Mulcaire’s emails, address and contacts books, and phone bills – to another hacking victim, the football agent Sky Andrew. The decision sets a precedent for the other hacking cases and has far-reaching implications for the NoW, police and other litigants. It will lead to a flood of hacking documents being released to other claimants, all of whom are seeking copies of papers seized by police in a 2006 raid on Mulcaire’s home.

    Full Story Here: Met must hand over News of the World phone-hacking evidence | Media | The Guardian.

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    Japan Makes Some Progress In Nuclear Crisis

     

     

    Japan made some progress on Sunday in its race to avert disaster at a nuclear power plant leaking radiation after an earthquake and tsunami that are estimated to have killed more than 15,000 people in one prefecture alone.

    Three hundred engineers have been battling inside the danger zone to salvage the six-reactor Fukushima plant in the world’s worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl 25 years ago.

    Police said they believed more than 15,000 people had been killed by the double disaster in Miyagi prefecture, one of four that took the brunt of the tsunami damage. In total, almost 12,000 people are missing in the northeast, where the confirmed death toll stood at more than 7,600.

    The unprecedented crisis will cost the world’s third largest economy as much as $200 billion and require Japan’s biggest reconstruction push since post-World War Two.

    It has also set back nuclear power plans the world over.

    Full Story Here: Japan Makes Some Progress In Nuclear Crisis.

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    Japan Finds More Types Of Radiation-Tainted Food

     

     

    At a bustling Tokyo supermarket Sunday, wary shoppers avoided one particular bin of spinach.

    The produce came from Ibaraki prefecture in the northeast, where radiation was found in spinach grown up to 75 miles (120 kilometers) from the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant. Another bin of spinach – labeled as being from Chiba prefecture, west of Tokyo – was sold out.

    “It’s a little hard to say this, but I won’t buy vegetables from Fukushima and that area,” said shopper Yukihiro Sato, 75.

    Full Story Here: Japan Finds More Types Of Radiation-Tainted Food.

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    Japan mulls Fukushima food sale ban

    Japan is considering whether to halt sales of food products from near a crippled nuclear plant because of contamination by a radioactive element which can pose a short-term health risk, the U.N. atomic agency said.

    “There is an investigation into the possible need to stop food sales,” Graham Andrew, a senior official of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), told reporters.

    The IAEA had earlier said Japan’s health ministry “ordered a stop to the sale of all food products from the Fukushima Prefecture” but Andrew said this was due to a mistranslation of information provided in Japanese.

    Full Story Here: Japan mulls Fukushima food sale ban | The Raw Story.

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    U.S. Concerned Japan Facing Situation That Could Be ‘Deadly For Decades’

     

     

    The White House is preparing for a situation in Japan that could be “deadly for decades,” a U.S. official tells ABC News.

    According to the official, the U.S. believes a larger evacuation zone should be imposed and that the next 24-48 hours are “critical.”

    “It would be hard to describe how alarming this is right now,” ABC quoted the anonymous official as saying.

    The nuclear crisis in Japan has intensified since the massive earthquake first damaged nuclear facilities. On Wednesday, the White House advised Americans within 50 miles of the Fukushima nuclear facility to evacuate and plant employees were temporarily forced to retreat as radiation levels “soared.”

    Full Story Here: U.S. Concerned Japan Facing Situation That Could Be ‘Deadly For Decades’: ABC News.

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    Haiti cholera epidemic to hit 800,000: study

    Up to 800,000 Haitians will contract cholera this year, double the estimates of UN agencies, a report published by The Lancet on Wednesday claimed.

    A US team led by Jason Andrews from Harvard School of Public Health also found that a recent dip in reported cases was likely a temporary phase of the epidemic and not related to the intervention efforts.

    “Although worldwide estimates of the epidemic at present are based on the assumption that the epidemic will attack four percent of the population, this assumption is essentially a guess,” the report said.

    Full Story Here: Haiti cholera epidemic to hit 800,000: study | The Raw Story.

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    Fukushima’s Spent Fuel Rods Pose Grave Danger

    Four atomic reactors in Fukushima, Japan, seem to be in partial meltdown. One of them, reactor No. 2, seems to have ruptured. The situation is spinning out of control as radiation levels spike. The US Navy has pulled back its aircraft carrier, the USS Ronald Reagan, after seventeen of its crew were exposed to radiation while flying sixty miles off the Japanese coast.

    But despite three major explosions—at reactor No. 1, then No. 3, then No. 2—the Fukushima containment vessels seem to be holding. (Chernobyl lacked that precaution, having only a flimsy cement containment shell that collapsed, allowing the massive release of radioactive material.)

    But there is another, potentially far more dangerous problem: the spent fuel rod pools that sit right next door to the reactors. The storage pools are packed with radioactive uranium, rise several stories above ground and are always close to the reactor, thus facilitating easy transfer of the fuel rods. Their name—especially “spent” and “pool”—conveys calm dissipation. But spent fuel rod pools are actually highly radioactive, very unstable, extremely dangerous and, compared with reactors, not well supported, contained or looked over.

    Full Story Here: Fukushima’s Spent Fuel Rods Pose Grave Danger | The Nation.

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    Fresh Fire at Japan Nuclear Reactor: Operator

    A fresh fire broke out at a reactor of Japan’s quake-hit Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant early Wednesday, operator Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO) said.

    An employee confirmed smoke was pouring from the roof of the number-four reactor at the plant, a TEPCO spokesman told reporters.

    “We immediately informed local authorities and the fire department about it,” the spokesman said. “We are battling the fire now.”

    A blaze and explosion hit the same reactor on Tuesday, causing a crack in the roof.

    The government has separately reported apparent damage to part of the container shielding the number-two reactor at Fukushima 250 kilometres (155 miles) northeast of Tokyo.

    Full Story Here: Fresh Fire at Japan Nuclear Reactor: Operator | Common Dreams.

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    Japan’s nuclear crisis worsens; the world reacts

     

     

    The nuclear crisis in Japan escalated on Tuesday after a new explosion and fire broke out at Fukushima’s plant #1, where successive accidents since Friday’s earthquake have probably caused more than 10,000 deaths.

    This sequence of events has raised strong fears of radioactive contamination in the archipelago, as well as in neighboring countries such as Russia and China.

    As a precaution, Prime Minister Naoto Kan has expanded the security zone around the plant by asking for people within a radius of 30 km to remain indoors, close their windows, turn off any fans and to keep their clothes on. This is in addition to the evacuation of more than 200,000 people living near the plant on the northeast coast of the Pacific Ocean.

    Full Story Here: Japan’s nuclear crisis worsens; the world reacts – National Foreign Policy | Examiner.com.

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    Tokyo sees rolling blackouts as 11 of 54 nuclear reactors shut down

    Beleaguered Tokyo Electric Power on Monday said it had begun a power outage in an area covering some parts of Tokyo and eight prefectures, affecting around 333,000 households.

    Authorities have announced plans for scheduled rolling power cuts in areas served by TEPCO to make up for the loss of power from crippled nuclear plants, including the Tokyo utility’s troubled Fukushima Number One facility.

    The outage began at around 5 pm (0800 GMT) and was expected to last around two hours. A TEPCO official told AFP that affected areas included some municipalities in Ibaraki prefecture, east of Tokyo, and Shizuoka southwest of the capital.

    Full Story Here: Tokyo sees rolling blackouts as 11 of 54 nuclear reactors shut down | The Raw Story.

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    Saudi Arabian forces prepare to enter Bahrain after day of clashes

     

     

    Crown Prince of Bahrain expected to invite Saudi support following anti-government demonstrations in capital

    Saudi forces are preparing to intervene in neighbouring Bahrain, after a day of clashes between police and protesters who mounted the most serious challenge to the island’s royal family since demonstrations began a month ago.

    The Crown Prince of Bahrain is expected to formally invite security forces from Saudi Arabia into his country today, as part of a request for support from other members of the six-member Gulf Co-operation Council.

    Thousands of demonstrators on Sunday cut off Bahrain’s financial centre and drove back police trying to eject them from the capital’s central roundabout, while protesters also clashed with government supporters on the campus of the main university.

    Full Story Here: Saudi Arabian forces prepare to enter Bahrain after day of clashes | World news | The Guardian.

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    Japan Frantic to Avert Multiple Nuclear Meltdowns

    Japan’s nuclear crisis intensified Sunday as authorities raced to combat the threat of multiple reactor meltdowns and more than 170,000 people evacuated the quake- and tsunami-savaged northeastern coast where fears spread over possible radioactive contamination.

    Nuclear plant operators were frantically trying to keep temperatures down in a series of nuclear reactors – including one where officials feared a partial meltdown could be happening Sunday – to prevent the disaster from growing worse.

    If a full-scale meltdown were to occur, experts interviewed by The Associated Press said melted fuel would eat through the bottom of the reactor vessel, then through the floor of the containment building. At that point, the uranium and dangerous byproducts would start escaping into the environment.

    Full Story Here: Japan Frantic to Avert Multiple Nuclear Meltdowns | Common Dreams.

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    Water, power, food scarce in vast swaths of Japan

    People across a devastated swath of Japan suffered for a third day Sunday without water, electricity and proper food, as the country grappled with the enormity of a massive earthquake and tsunami that left more than 10,000 people dead in one area alone.

    Japan’s prime minister called the crisis the most severe challenge the nation has faced since World War II, as the grim situation worsened. Friday’s disasters damaged a series of nuclear reactors, potentially sending one through a partial meltdown and adding radiation contamination to the fears of an unsettled public.

    Temperatures began sinking toward freezing, compounding the misery of survivors along hundreds of miles (kilometers) of the northeastern coast battered by the tsunami that smashed inland with breathtaking fury. Rescuers pulled bodies from mud-covered jumbles of wrecked houses, shattered tree trunks, twisted cars and tangled power lines while survivors examined the ruined remains.

    Full Story Here: Water, power, food scarce in vast swaths of Japan – Yahoo! News.

    OPS: Sadly, the dead and missing numbers are already way out of date

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    Gaddafi’s army will kill half a million, warn Libyan rebels


    Rebels flee Ras Lanuf and call on UN to impose no-fly zone as Gaddafi’s forces recapture strategically important towns

     

    Muammar Gaddafi‘s army won control of a strategic rebel-held Libyan town and laid siege to another as the revolutionary administration in Benghazi again appealed for foreign military help to prevent what it said would be the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people if the insurgents were to lose.

    The rebels admitted retreating from the oil town of Ras Lanuf – captured a week ago – after two days of intense fighting and that the nearby town of Brega was now threatened.

    The revolutionary army, in large part made up of inexperienced young volunteers, has been forced back by a sustained artillery, tank and air bombardment about 20 miles along the road to the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Full Story Here: Gaddafi’s army will kill half a million, warn Libyan rebels | World news | The Observer.

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    Thousands form human chain in protest against nuclear energy in Germany

    The explosion at the Japanese nuclear power plant has given new fuel to a long-running dispute in Germany, where tens of thousands demonstrated on Saturday against plans to extend the life of the country’s nuclear power stations.

    According to the police, some 50 000 people took part in the protest which saw a human chain spread from a nuclear power plant in Neckarwestheim to the city of Stuttgart.

    Those participating in the demonstration said it was time for the German government to move away from nuclear power.

    Full Story Here: Thousands form human chain in protest against nuclear energy in Germany | euronews, world news.

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    Japanese volcano erupts

    A volcano in southwestern Japan erupted Sunday after nearly two weeks of relative silence, sending ash and rocks up to four kilometres (two and a half miles) into the air, a local official says.

    It was not immediately clear if the eruption was a direct result of the massive 8.9-magnitude earthquake that rocked northern areas Friday, unleashing a fierce tsunami and sparking fears that more than 10,000 may have been killed.

    The 1,421-metre (4,689-feet) Shinmoedake volcano in the Kirishima range saw its first major eruption for 52 years in January. There had not been any major activity at the site since March 1.

    Authorities have maintained a volcano warning at a level of three out of five, restricting access to the entire mountain.

    Full Story Here: Japanese volcano erupts – Times LIVE.

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    Japan tsunami earthquake – Video

    North-east Japan has been swamped by a major tsunami – and the entire Pacific region is now on alert. It was caused by an 8.9-magnitude earthquake that struck 130 kilometres off the eastern coast – sending a reported 10-metre wall of water inland, causing widespread devastation. 32 people are confirmed dead – but that number’s expected to rise. The wave has also reached Russia’s Kuril islands to the north, reportedly around a metre high. In Japan, 200 people have reportedly been washed away, with several others missing in Japan’s Sendai city. Tokyo’s been all-but shut down – with fires and injuries widely reported there. Millions are without electricity. Norita International Airport is also closed. 20 powerful aftershocks have been recorded since the first quake, which was the strongest ever recorded in Japan – and the 6th biggest-ever. An earthquake has now been felt in Hawaii – measuring 4.5 – with tsunami waves expected within a few horus.

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    Gaddafi Forces Shell Major Oil Terminal In Brega As Troops Advance Against Rebels

    Troops loyal to Muammar Gaddafi shelled an oil town in eastern Libya on Sunday, pounding pockets of resistance during their swift advance on the country’s poorly equipped and loosely organized rebels.

    Rebel officials in their stronghold of Benghazi told The Associated Press that Brega, the site of a major oil terminal, came under heavy shelling Sunday. Libyan state television reported that government troops had retaken the town, but the report could not immediately be verified.

    Libyan TV has issued faulty reports claiming territory in the past.

    The loss of Brega would be the latest in a series of setbacks for opposition forces who just a week ago held the entire eastern half of the country and were charging toward the capital, Tripoli. But Gaddafi’s troops have reversed many of those early gains, bearing down on the rebels with superior firepower from the air.

    Full Story Here: Libya: Gaddafi Forces Shell Major Oil Terminal In Brega As Troops Advance Against Rebels.

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    Quake moved Japan by 8 feet: USGS

    Japan’s recent massive earthquake, one of the largest ever recorded, appears to have moved the island by about eight feet (2.4 meters), the US Geological Survey said.

    “That’s a reasonable number,” USGS seismologist Paul Earle told AFP. “Eight feet, that’s certainly going to be in the ballpark.”

    Friday’s 8.9 magnitude quake unleashed a terrifying tsunami that engulfed towns and cities on Japan’s northeastern coast, destroying everything in its path in what Prime Minister Naoto Kan said was an “unprecedented national disaster.”

    Full Story Here: Quake moved Japan by 8 feet: USGS | The Raw Story.

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    Japan doubles troops for quake help, world offers aid

    Japan on Sunday committed 100,000 troops to help earthquake and tsunami survivors as the world rallied behind the disaster-stricken nation and a US aircraft carrier arrived off the shattered coast.

    The deployment, ordered by Prime Minister Naoto Kan, doubles the number of troops already on the ground, after the massive scale of the devastation wrought by the twin disasters emerged.

    “I ask for utmost efforts to save the lives of as many people as possible,” Kan told a meeting of the government’s emergency disaster headquarters, Kyodo News reported.

    Full Story Here: Japan doubles troops for quake help, world offers aid | The Raw Story.

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    Aristide returning to Haiti in days

    Ousted ex-Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide will return within days to his homeland ending seven years in exile, a South African official said Friday. The former slum priest remains hugely popular and his return could disrupt elections this month in his earthquake-ravaged country.

    In Haiti, an official with Aristide’s party confirmed that his “return is imminent,” but declined to say how or when he’s coming back.

    “It’s an important event for the people in Haiti because they have waited so long for this,” said Maryse Narcisse, the head of Lavalas’ executive council. “He will not be traveling incognito. People will know he is coming.”

    Full Story Here: The Associated Press: APNewsBreak: Aristide returning to Haiti in days.

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    Europe Takes the Lead in Drive to Tax Speculators – IPS

     

     

    There are still places in the world where folks from across the political spectrum can have a rational discussion about fair taxation.

    High-speed rail, universal health care, quality cheese. Let’s face it — the Europeans often leave us Yanks way behind. And now they appear on track again, with solid progress this week towards adopting an innovative proposal to pay for the costs of the global economic crisis.

    On March 8, the European Parliament voted 360-299 in favor of introducing financial transactions taxes, tiny levies on trades of stocks, derivatives, currency, and other financial instruments. The proposal could generate an estimated $200 billion per year in revenue for European governments to channel into job creation and other urgent needs. At the same time, it would discourage the type of risky, short-term speculation that got us into this economic mess in the first place.

    What’s most astounding is that the tax proposal sailed through despite the European Parliament’s strong right-wing majority. Yes, there are still places in the world where folks from across the political spectrum can have a rational discussion about fair taxation.

    Full Story Here: Europe Takes the Lead in Drive to Tax Speculators – IPS.

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    Jacques Chirac, Former French President, To Stand Trial

     

     

    After years of claiming presidential immunity to avoid legal proceedings, Jacques Chirac is finally facing a court.

    The former president, a bugaboo for George W. Bush during his rush to war in Iraq, on Monday becomes France’s first former head of state to go on trial since its Nazi-era leader was exiled

    That is, if the whole case isn’t derailed by a last-minute protest by another defendant.

    Full Story Here: Jacques Chirac, Former French President, To Stand Trial.

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    Libya: Pro-Gaddafi Forces Launch New Counteroffensive As Rebels Advance Toward Tripoli

    Libyan helicopter gunships fired on a rebel force advancing west toward the capital Tripoli along the country’s Mediterranean coastline Sunday and forces loyal to leader Moammar Gaddafi fought intense ground battles with the rival fighters.

    The opposition force pushed out of the rebel-held eastern half of Libya late last week for the first time and have been cutting a path west toward Tripoli. On the way, they secured control of two important oil ports at Brega and Ras Lanouf and by Sunday, the rebels were advancing farther west when they were hit by the helicopter fire and confrontations with ground forces.

    Fierce ground battles were raging around the front line between two towns about 30 miles (50 kilometers) apart, Ras Lanouf and Bin Jawad to the west. Associated Press reporters at the scene said Gaddafi loyalists retook Bin Jawad, about 110 miles (160 kilometers) east of Gaddafi’s hometown and stronghold of Sirte, which could prove to be a decisive battleground.

    Full Story Here: Libya: Pro-Gaddafi Forces Launch New Counteroffensive As Rebels Advance Toward Tripoli.

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    Saudi Arabia bans all marches as mass protest is planned for Friday

    Extra troops are sent to north-east to quash any Shia protest as King Abdullah’s regime gets jittery and oil prices soar in response to the region’s continued unrest

    Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil producer and the regional domino whose fall the West fears most, yesterday announced that it would ban all protests and marches. The move – the stick to match the carrot of benefits worth $37bn (£23bn) recently offered citizens in an effort to stave off the unrest that has overtaken nearby states – comes before a “day of rage” threatened for this Friday by opponents of the regime.

    The Saudi Interior Ministry said the kingdom has banned all demonstrations because they contradict Islamic laws and social values. The ministry said some people have tried to get around the law to “achieve illegitimate aims” and it warned that security forces were authorised to act against violators. By way of emphasis, a statement broadcast on Saudi television said the authorities would “use all measures” to prevent any attempt to disrupt public order.

     

    Full Story Here: Saudi Arabia bans all marches as mass protest is planned for Friday – Middle East, World – The Independent.

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    It’s ‘Harper Government,’ please

     

     

    Public servants told to name PM, not country

    It’s official: Stephen Harper rules.

    And lest anyone forgets, a directive went out to public servants late last year that “Government of Canada” in federal communications should be replaced by the words “Harper Government.”

    Public servants from four different departments told The Canadian Press the instruction came from “the Centre” — meaning the Prime Minister’s Office and the Privy Council Office that serves the prime minister.

    None would speak on the record for fear of retribution. It’s a well-grounded concern given the treatment of a senior government scientist who was fired in 2006 after rebelling against a directive to use “Canada’s New Government” in government communications.

    Full Story Here: It’s ‘Harper Government,’ please – Canada – TheChronicleHerald.ca.

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    Critics Call Secret U.S.-Canada Talks “End Run Around Democracy”

    The just-announced Canada-U.S. security perimetre discussions are comprehensive and potentially wide-ranging and could impact Canadian sovereignty. However, the domestic opposition appears to have been caught off-guard.

    It is hard to fight a deal when Ottawa and Washington are offering few details, said Vancouver-based international lawyer, author and commentator Michael Byers in a recent interview with IPS.

    “The people who are opposed to this are left pointing at shadows rather than anything concrete,” he noted.

    Both Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper and U.S. President Barack Obama were vague in January about what a Canada-U.S. security perimetre would entail in a predicted deal later this year.

    Full Story Here: Critics Call Secret U.S.-Canada Talks “End Run Around Democracy”.

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    Fox News’ Lies Keep Them Out of Canada

     

     

    As America’s middle class battles for its survival on the Wisconsin barricades – against various Koch Oil surrogates and the corporate toadies at Fox News – fans of enlightenment, democracy and justice can take comfort from a significant victory north of the Wisconsin border. Fox News will not be moving into Canada after all! The reason: Canadian regulators announced last week they would reject efforts by Canada’s right-wing Prime Minister, Stephen Harper, to repeal a law that forbids lying on broadcast news.

    Canada’s Radio Act requires that “a licenser may not broadcast … any false or misleading news.” The provision has kept Fox News and right-wing talk radio out of Canada and helped make Canada a model for liberal democracy and freedom. As a result of that law, Canadians enjoy high quality news coverage, including the kind of foreign affairs and investigative journalism that flourished in this country before Ronald Reagan abolished the “Fairness Doctrine” in 1987. Political dialogue in Canada is marked by civility, modesty, honesty, collegiality, and idealism that have pretty much disappeared on the US airwaves. When Stephen Harper moved to abolish the anti-lying provision of the Radio Act, Canadians rose up to oppose him fearing that their tradition of honest non-partisan news would be replaced by the toxic, overtly partisan, biased and dishonest news coverage familiar to American citizens who listen to Fox News and talk radio. Harper’s proposal was timed to facilitate the launch of a new right-wing network, “Sun TV News” which Canadians call “Fox News North.”

    Harper, often referred to as “George W. Bush’s Mini Me,” is known for having mounted a Bush-like war on government scientists, data collectors, transparency, and enlightenment in general. He is a wizard of all the familiar tools of demagoguery; false patriotism, bigotry, fear, selfishness and belligerent religiosity

    Full Story Here: Fox News’ Lies Keep Them Out of Canada.

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    WikiLeaks, ‘the Internet’ among record number of Nobel Peace Price nominees

    Anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks, the Internet and a Russian human rights activist are among a record 241 nominations for the 2011 Nobel Peace Prize.

    The Norwegian Nobel Committee said on Tuesday that the 2011 field includes 53 organizations and tops last year’s 237 nominees.

    Known nominees also include Afghan rights advocate Sima Samar, the European Union, former German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, Cuban dissident Oswaldo Paya Sardinas, Russian rights group Memorial and its founder Svetlana Gannushkina.

    Full Story Here: WikiLeaks, ‘the Internet’ among record number of Nobel Peace Price nominees | The Raw Story.

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    Argentine dictators go on trial for baby thefts

     

     

    A long-awaited trial has begun for two former Argentine dictators who allegedly oversaw a systematic plan to steal babies born to political prisoners three decades ago.

    Jorge Videla and Reynaldo Bignone are accused in 34 cases of infants who were taken from mothers held in Argentina’s largest clandestine torture and detention centres, the Navy Mechanics School in Buenos Aires and the Campo de Mayo army base northwest of the city.

    Also on trial are five military figures and a doctor who attended to the detainees.

    The case was opened 14 years ago at the request of the Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo, a leading human rights group. It may take up to a year to hear testimony from about 370 witnesses.

    Full Story Here: Argentine dictators go on trial for baby thefts | Stuff.co.nz.

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    North Korea Threatens To Attack South Korea, U.S.

     

     

    North Korea threatened Sunday to enlarge its nuclear arsenal and mercilessly attack South Korea and the United States, as the allies prepared to start annual joint military drills which the North says are a rehearsal for an invasion.

    North Korea routinely issues similar threats against South Korea and the U.S. over any joint military drills. The latest warning, however, could rekindle tensions on the Korean peninsula which sharply rose last year after two deadly incidents blamed on the North.

    North Korea fired artillery at a front-line South Korean island in November, killing four people. The barrage came eight months after the sinking of a South Korean warship which killed 46 sailors. North Korea has denied firing a torpedo at the ship.

    North Korea called the planned South Korea-U.S. drills a “dangerous military scheme.”

    Full Story Here: North Korea Threatens To Attack South Korea, U.S..

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    A World Going Hungry

    In an era of mass consumption in the West, the developing world is entering its second major hunger crisis in three years, with new figures from the World Bank showing food price hikes have forced 44 million people into economic hardship since last June.

    More than one billion people, a sixth of the world’s population, now face chronic hunger and the situation is likely to worsen this year, with experts such as David Nabarro, coordinator of the U.N. Secretary-General’s High- Level Task Force on the Global Food Security Crisis, warning food prices are on an “upward trend”.

    “Somewhere in the region of two billion households are earning less than two dollars per day and spending somewhere around three quarters of their income on food,” Geneva-based Nabarro told reporters in New York via video-link on Friday.

    Full Story Here: A World Going Hungry – IPS ipsnews.net.

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    Leader Of Egyptian Unions To Wisconsin Protesters: ‘We Stand With You As You Stood With Us’

    One of the most underreported stories about the pro-democracy movement in Egypt was the role of labor unions in the demonstrations, many of which were protesting against neoliberal right-wing economic policies just as much as they were protesting against the Mubarak dictatorship. During the uprising in that country, AFL-CIO president Richard Trumka praised the role of organized labor, saying, “The people’s movement for democracy in Egypt and the role unions are playing for freedom and worker rights inspires us and will not be forgotten.”

    Now, as tens of thousands of union members and other Wisconsin residents are taking to the streets to protest against Gov. Scott Walker’s (R) attempt to abolish collective bargaining rights for most public workers, a leader of Egypt’s largest umbrella group of independent labor unions is praising the Wisconsin movement. In a videotaped statement, Kamal Abbas, the General Coordinator of the Centre for Trade Unions and Workers Services, tells the Wisconsin protesters, “We stand with you as you stood with us.” He says “no one believed” that the revolution against the Mubarak regime would succeed, yet they were able to bring the dictator down within 18 days. He encourages demonstrators to stay strong, saying, “Don’t give up on your rights. Victory always belongs to the people who stand firm and demand their just rights”:

    Full Story Here: ThinkProgress » Leader Of Egyptian Unions To Wisconsin Protesters: ‘We Stand With You As You Stood With Us’.

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    Egypt is no longer committed to an alliance with Israel against Iran

    There is growing concern in Israel that Egypt will become a hostile front, adding to the feeling of international isolation which has only intensified since Benjamin Netanyahu became prime minister.

    A year and a half ago, an Israel Navy submarine crossed the Suez Canal on its way from Haifa to the Red Sea, where it conducted an exercise, and back. The unusual voyage reflected the growing strategic cooperation between Israel and Egypt, which aimed a menacing message at Iran. The submarine’s crossing of the waterway demonstrated how quickly Israel could deploy its deterrent near Iran’s shores, with the tacit support of Egypt.

    Once more, the canal is being used to deliver a message of deterrence – but this time the direction is reversed. Egypt is allowing Iranian warships to cross the canal, on their way to Syrian ports. Israel was publicly critical of the passage – arguing that it is a provocative move – but Egypt ignored the pressures and granted the Iranian navy permission to pass, symbolizing the change to the regional balance of power following the fall of President Hosni Mubarak.

    Full Story Here: Egypt is no longer committed to an alliance with Israel against Iran – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.

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    Brits object to Corporate Tax cuts

    Global citizens take to the London streets to demand Philip Green pays his taxes!

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    Activists disappear as Beijing cracks down on copycat protests

    Several top Chinese rights activists have disappeared into police custody as a web campaign urged angry citizens to mark the Middle East’s ”Jasmine Revolution” with protests, campaigners say.

    Up to 15 leading rights lawyers and activists have disappeared since Saturday, said campaigners, while the government appeared to censor internet postings calling for the demonstrations.

    In a speech on Saturday, the President, Hu Jintao, acknowledged growing social unrest and urged the ruling Communist Party to better safeguard stability while also ordering strengthened controls over ”virtual society” or the internet.

    Full Story Here: Activists disappear as Beijing cracks down on copycat protests.

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    Arrests after China web users call for protests

    Several top Chinese rights activists have disappeared into police custody as a web campaign urged angry citizens to mark the Middle East’s “Jasmine Revolution” with protests, campaigners said Sunday.

    Up to 15 leading Chinese rights lawyers and activists have disappeared since Saturday, campaigners said, while the Chinese government appeared to censor Internet postings calling for the demonstrations.

    “We welcome… laid off workers and victims of forced evictions to participate in demonstrations, shout slogans and seek freedom, democracy and political reform to end ‘one party rule’,” one Internet posting said.

    Full Story Here: France24 – Arrests after China web users call for protests.

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    Morocco protesters demand political change

    Thousands of people have marched in Moroccan cities to demand that King Mohammed give up some of his powers.

    In the capital, Rabat, police allowed protesters to approach parliament, chanting slogans like “The people reject a constitution made for slaves!”

    A separate protest is under way in the country’s biggest city, Casablanca, and another was planned in Marrakesh.

    Protests have spread across the region since popular movements in Tunisia and Egypt forced out leaders.

    Full Story Here: BBC News – Morocco protesters demand political change.

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    Bahrain opposition set demands for talks with royals

    Opposition groups and anti-government protesters in Bahrain say their demands must be met before they will enter into talks with the Gulf state’s monarchy.

    They want the government to resign, political prisoners to be released and the deaths of protesters investigated.

    Six people were killed and many wounded in the last week as security forces used deadly force to quell protests.

    Demonstrators have re-established a protest camp in Manama’s central Pearl Square after security forces withdrew.

    Full Story Here: BBC News – Bahrain opposition set demands for talks with royals.

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    World Bank : Rising food prices nearing danger point

    starvation

    World Bank president Robert Zoellick warned leaders of the top global economies Saturday that the world is reaching a danger point where soaring food prices threaten further political instability.

    “I mentioned that we are reaching a danger point,” Zoellick said, adding that he had urged G20 finance ministers and central bank chiefs meeting here to “put food first in 2011.”

    Zoellick said rising prices would eventually result in increased food supplies but in the intervening couple of years, “there could be an awful lot of turmoil and governments could fall and societies could go into turmoil.”

    Full Story Here: Rising food prices nearing danger point: World Bank | The Raw Story.

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    Palestinians Despair As Obama Administration Vetoes Resolution Critical Of Israeli Settlements

    Last month, a number of prominent scholars, activists, and former U.S. diplomats signed an open letter to President Obama urging him to support an upcoming U.N. Security Council “resolution condemning Israeli settlements” in the internationally recognized Palestinian territories. The letter warned that vetoing the resolution would “severely undermine US credibility and interests, placing us firmly outside of the international consensus, and further diminishing our ability to mediate this conflict.”

    Yet yesterday, as the resolution appeared to be heading to passage, the Obama administration directed its delegation at the United Nations to veto it, killing any official U.N. condemnation of Israel’s colonization practices in the Palestinian territories. Obama’s ambassador to the United Nations, Susan Rice, said that while the veto didn’t mean that the U.S. approved of the Israeli settlements policy, that it issued the veto anyway because the resolution would risk “hardening the positions of both sides and could encourage the parties to say out of negotiations“:

    Full Story Here: ThinkProgress » Palestinians Despair As Obama Administration Vetoes Resolution Critical Of Israeli Settlements.

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    • Thom’s Blog
      Thom plus logo

      If we don't change our ways soon...

      A new report by the Royal Society, chaired by Nobel prize-winning biologist Sir John Sulston warns that world population must be stabilized and consumption in wealthy nations must be reduced or the entire planet is in big trouble. As the report reads: "The number of people living on the planet has never been higher, their levels of consumption are unprecedented and vast changes are taking place in the environment. We can choose to rebalance the use of resources to a more egalitarian pattern of consumption... or we can choose to do nothing and to drift into a downward spiral of economic and environmental ills leading to a more unequal and inhospitable future."
      This is the same warning that President Jimmy Carter gave Americans back in the 1970's - but it was ignored when Ronald Reagan came to power with a "more positive" message basically telling Americans we can do whatever we want. And then after 9/11 - Bush told us all we should go shopping and consume ever more.
      And now with corporations calling the shots in Washington - long-term sustainability of the planet takes a back seat to short-term profits. If we don't change our ways soon - and embrace clean, alternative energy and educate women around the plant - then we all could be headed for a rough century.
      -Thom
      (Is there any chance we will learn in time? Tell us here.)
    • LEGALIZE Democracy

      " We the corporations" On January 21, 2010, with its ruling in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, the Supreme Court ruled that corporations are persons, entitled by the U.S. Constitution to buy elections and run our government. __________

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      Help end Corporate personhood