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Nuclear safety: How prepared is the U.S.? (Exclusive to Yahoo! News)

Published by in Uncategorized on March 21st, 2011 | Comments Off

By Coral Davenport
National Journal

Among the most dramatic discrepancies between the U.S. and Japanese responses to the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster were the evacuation zones.

As radiation leaked from the crippled reactors in the wake of a devastating earthquake and tsunami, Japanese officials told residents to evacuate if they were within 20 kilometers, roughly 13 miles. The U.S. Embassy, meanwhile, recommended evacuations within a radius of 80 km, or 50 miles.

“We have our own set of standards and safety, and we thought we’d err on the side of caution,” U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu said on CNN’s State of the Union on Sunday.

In fact, U.S. safety standards only require evacuation within a 10-mile radius in the case of nuclear disaster. That has prompted a full-throated call from experts, officials, and nuclear-safety watchdogs for an expansion of nuclear evacuation zones to 50 miles.

“We need to have better evacuation plans. I don’t think we have adequate ones,” said former Energy Secretary Bill Richardson, speaking Sunday on ABC’s This Week.

Expanding U.S. nuclear evacuation areas to 50 miles could have profound consequences—for one, several major metropolitan areas would find themselves within that range, including New York City and greater Washington and Los Angeles.

(Three ways we’re less prepared)

Evacuation ranges will be among hundreds of rules that the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the government agency that oversees the nuclear industry’s safety, will consider in the coming weeks and months as it begins to review its existing standards in response to an order by President Obama. Nuclear-safety watchdog groups, led by the Boston-based Union of Concerned Scientists, which does not advocate for or against nuclear power, say they believe the review should turn up dozens of loopholes and lax regulations that could lead to accidents at one of the nation’s 64 nuclear power plants.

The commission held its first public hearing on the events in Japan on Monday morning. It met over the weekend to begin sketching out a “plan of a plan for how to go forward” on reviewing the existing safety standards for U.S. nuclear reactors, NRC Chairman Gregory Jaczko said Sunday in an interview on C-SPAN’s Newsmakers.

(Five ways we’re better prepared)

Jaczko has been circumspect about what the review might turn up, insisting that he wants to proceed methodically through a review of the regulations before making recommendations. But the Fukushima disaster has already thrown a spotlight on nuclear-safety issues that have already been under scrutiny in the U.S. Here are some of the questions that regulators—and the public—will grapple with in the debate about nuclear safety.

Evacuation plans

Some nuclear-safety experts aren’t convinced even the current 10-mile evacuation zones around U.S. nuclear plants can be effectively evacuated. Meanwhile, the practical implications for expanding those zones to up to 50 miles could be expensive and complicated. Populations living in the zones may have to become familiar with evacuation drills. “Schools in New York City might suddenly have to stockpile potassium iodide,” said Edwin Lyman, a senior researcher with the Union of Concerned Scientists.

“It would be an enormous challenge—which is why I expect the NRC to push back on that.”

Spent-fuel storage pools

The disaster in Japan put the spotlight on how nuclear power plants store waste on site. Depleted—but still lethally radioactive—spent uranium fuel rods are stacked in giant pools of water. Emptying the spent-fuel pools exposes the rods and causes them to heat up and ignite into a radioactive inferno. That’s been the greatest fear as water has emptied from the Fukushima spent-fuel pools. And it’s highlighted a grave concern for U.S. plants, which pack spent fuel rods into pools at much higher densities than those in Japan. Nuclear-safety advocates have been raising red flags for years about packed U.S. spent-fuel pools, and they are sure to come under greater scrutiny as the NRC reexamines its spent-fuel pool standards.

Relicensing old plants

While there have been many advancements in nuclear-safety technology, the nation’s stock of 104 commercial reactors is getting old. Most of the U.S. nuclear fleet was built between 1969 and 1984, including 23 reactors that are the same model as the Fukushima Daiichi. As existing plants approach the end of their license periods—generally granted for 40 years—there will be increasing debate about the safety criteria for extending those licenses.

What about Indian Point?

Indian Point Energy Center, licensed in 1973 and located less than 24 miles from New York City, has drawn fire for years from nuclear watchdogs.  It is the only major nuclear plant located in such close proximity to a major metropolitan area, and NRC inspectors have determined that it has a slow water leak in one of its reactors. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) has called for it to be shut down, and officials from Cuomo’s office are set to meet with the NRC on Tuesday.

“That is an issue,” Chu said on Fox News Sunday. “We will have to look at whether this reactor should remain.”

Siting new plants

The renewed public uncertainty over nuclear power, and the likelihood that new nuclear power could soon become economically untenable due to increased regulation and liability costs, is likely to put a de facto freeze on new U.S. plants for years. But even if new plants do come on line, there will be a hot new debate on where they can be sited, particularly with relation to coasts or earthquake fault lines. “Certainly, where you site reactors… going forward will be different,” Chu said on Fox News Sunday.

How much will it cost?

Conducting the safety reviews could well cost the federal government more money. Jaczko said on C-SPAN on Sunday, “This is going to be a very significant workload for the agency. If we need additional resources to deal with it, then we’re going to have to ask Congress for support. But our No. 1 priority will be security and safety for the existing fleet, and we won’t take away resources from that.”

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Three journalists missing in Libya: report

Published by in Uncategorized on March 20th, 2011 | Comments Off

NEW YORK |
Sun Mar 20, 2011 3:37pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Three journalists, including two working for Agence France-Presse, have gone missing while covering the fighting in Libya, the news agency said on Sunday.

In a statement AFP said Dave Clark, a reporter based at its Paris headquarters, and Roberto Schmidt, a photographer in its Nairobi bureau, had not been heard from since they sent an email to senior editors on Friday evening.

Clark, 38, and Schmidt, 45, said in the email they planned to travel to an area about 19 miles outside of the eastern oil-rich city of Tobruk on Saturday to meet opponents of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi and to speak to refugees fleeing the fighting, AFP said.

They were accompanied by Joe Raedle, a photographer from the Getty Images agency who also has not been heard from since Friday evening, AFP said.

Four New York Times journalists were captured by Libyan forces last week while covering the conflict in the eastern part of the country. The newspaper said it has been told they would be released.

(Reporting by Maria Aspan; Editing by Paul Simao and Todd Eastham)

The rest is here:



Three journalists missing in Libya: report (Reuters)

Published by in Uncategorized on March 20th, 2011 | Comments Off

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Three journalists, including two working for Agence France-Presse, have gone missing while covering the fighting in Libya, the news agency said on Sunday.

In a statement AFP said Dave Clark, a reporter based at its Paris headquarters, and Roberto Schmidt, a photographer in its Nairobi bureau, had not been heard from since they sent an email to senior editors on Friday evening.

Clark, 38, and Schmidt, 45, said in the email they planned to travel to an area about 19 miles outside of the eastern oil-rich city of Tobruk on Saturday to meet opponents of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi and to speak to refugees fleeing the fighting, AFP said.

They were accompanied by Joe Raedle, a photographer from the Getty Images agency who also has not been heard from since Friday evening, AFP said.

Four New York Times journalists were captured by Libyan forces last week while covering the conflict in the eastern part of the country. The newspaper said it has been told they would be released.

(Reporting by Maria Aspan; Editing by Paul Simao and Todd Eastham)

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Three journalists missing in Libya: report
(Reuters)



Tibetans in exile begin voting for new leader (AP)

Published by in Uncategorized on March 20th, 2011 | Comments Off

DHARMSALA, India – Tibetans across the world began voting Sunday for a new leader to take up the resistance against Chinese rule over their Himalayan homeland, as the Tibetan parliament-in-exile debated how to handle the Dalai Lama’s resignation from politics.

Hundreds of monks in crimson robes joined Tibetan students, housewives and business people and the elderly in lining up in the courtyard of the Tsuglakhang Temple in India’s northern city of Dharmsala, where the exiled government is based, to cast their votes in a cheerful and festive atmosphere.

Despite pleas from the Tibetan community in exile that the Dalai Lama stay on as head of government, the Buddhist spiritual leader has been adamant that the elected prime minister should take over.

The shift in power marks a major change for the Tibetan community, which for decades has looked to the Dalai Lama for both spiritual and political guidance against the heavy-handed rule of China’s Communist authorities in Tibet.

The parliament-in-exile was discussing constitutional changes Sunday to enact the change and free the 76-year-old Nobel Peace laureate to focus on spiritual matters.

“He has conveyed his decision to give up his political responsibilities firmly,” parliament Speaker Penpa Tsering said Saturday, predicting the assembly would honor his wish despite passing a resolution a day earlier asking him to stay.

The Dalai Lama — who is vilified by China as a political schemer — has never fully explained his decision to resign, which he announced on the March 10 anniversary of a failed 1959 uprising against Chinese rule over Tibet that sent him into exile.

But he has suggested negotiations with Beijing might be less complicated under another Tibetan figurehead, and he has said that, in the 21st century, the idea that leaders should be elected and representative was correct.

Successive rounds of talks between Chinese officials and representatives of the Buddhist leader have made no apparent progress toward bringing the sides together, as Beijing accuses the Dalai Lama of seeking to separate Tibet from China, despite his claims to be working only for a high degree of autonomy under Chinese rule.

On Sunday, some 85,000 registered Tibetans in exile — 11,000 of them in Dharmsala — were choosing the new prime minister among three candidates, as well as some new parliament members, in an election previously scheduled, even if its importance was only boosted this month when the Dalai Lama resigned. Election results will be likely announced April 27.

Front-runner Lobsang Sengey — a senior fellow at Harvard Law School born and brought up in exile — said Tibet would now be fighting against China on two fronts.

“On one side we’ll have the Dalai Lama, who has historical legitimacy and global popularity,” he told The Associated Press. “And on the second, we have a democratic government functioning in exile. We are showing China that, if Tibetans are allowed to choose, they are capable of forming a stable democratic government.”

The other candidates are Tenzin Namgyal Tethong, a diplomat also settled in the U.S., and Tashi Wangdi, who was the Dalai Lama’s representative in Brussels, New York and New Delhi.

Earlier Sunday, when Sengey walked up to the temple to cast his ballot, the crowd cheered and children jostled to shake his hand and take his photograph. If he wins, he said, he and his family will move to Dharmsala from their U.S. home outside Boston, Massachusetts. Regardless, he would still consider the Dalai Lama his leader.

“All I could hope for is to live up to his expectations and, according to his wishes, see our democracy mature,” he said. Though he knew of the Dalai Lama’s wish to step down politically, he did not expect it this year. “I felt a strong emotion, like all Tibetans. I was anxious, nervous and curious, and the news was difficult to digest.”

The Dalai Lama, who is believed to be in fairly good health, will maintain his position as spiritual leader until his death, when a new Dalai Lama would be found. He has indicated his successor would come from the exile community, and could even be a girl.

The question of succession has become all important within the Tibetan community, for whom the Dalai Lama is a symbol of cultural survival and political resistance.

Beijing insists the reincarnation must be found in China’s Tibetan areas, and has made clear that it intends to have the final say — giving Communist authorities immense power over who is chosen.

Many observers believe there eventually will be rival Dalai Lamas, one appointed by Beijing and one by senior monks loyal to the current Dalai Lama.

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Tibetans in exile begin voting for new leader
(AP)



Yemeni police storm protest camp in Aden (AP)

Published by in Uncategorized on March 19th, 2011 | Comments Off

SANAA, Yemen – Witnesses and a security official say police have stormed a protest camp in southern Yemen where thousands are calling for the ouster of the country’s longtime president.

Saturday’s raid was the latest attempt by security forces to put down growing unrest. On Friday, security forces in the Yemeni capital Sanaa killed at least 46 and injured hundreds in the harshest crackdown yet by President Ali Abdullah Saleh against more than one month of protests against his 32-year rule.

Protesters say police fired tear gas and live rounds Saturday in the southern port city of Aden. The number of injured remained unclear.

Saleh’s weak central government is a U.S. ally in the fight against al-Qaida. He also faces two armed insurrections and an active al-Qaida branch.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

SANAA, Yemen (AP) — A massive demonstration against Yemen’s government turned into a killing field Friday as snipers methodically fired down on protesters from rooftops and police made a wall of fire with tires and gasoline, blocking a key escape route.

At least 46 people died, including some children, in an attack that marked a new level of brutality in President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s crackdown on dissent. Medical officials and witnesses said hundreds were wounded.

The dramatic escalation in violence suggested Saleh was growing more fearful that the unprecedented street protests over the past month, set off by unrest across the Arab world, could unravel his 32-year grip on power in this volatile, impoverished and gun-saturated nation. The United States, which has long relied on Saleh for help fighting terrorism, condemned the violence.

The bloodshed, however, failed to dislodge protesters from a large traffic circle they have dubbed “Taghyir Square” — Arabic for “Change.” Hours after the shooting, thousands demanding Saleh’s ouster stood their ground, many of them hurling stones at security troops and braving live fire and tear gas.

They stormed several buildings where the snipers had taken position, dragging out 10 people — including some the protesters claimed were paid thugs. They said the men would be handed over to judicial authorities.

The protest in the capital, Sanaa, drew tens of thousands, the largest crowd yet in Yemen’s uprising. It began peacefully. A military helicopter flew low over the square just as protesters were arriving after the main Muslim prayer services of the week.

A short while later, gunfire rang out from rooftops and houses, sending the crowd into a panic. Dozens were hit and crumpled to the ground. One man ran for help cradling a young boy shot in the head.

Many of the victims were shot in the head and neck, their bodies left sprawled on the ground or carried off by other protesters desperately pressing scarves to wounds to try to stop the bleeding.

Police used burning tires and gasoline to block demonstrators from fleeing down a main road leading to sensitive locations, including the president’s residence.

“It is a massacre,” said Mohammad al-Sabri, an opposition spokesman. “This is part of a criminal plan to kill off the protesters, and the president and his relatives are responsible for the bloodshed in Yemen today.”

Witnesses said the snipers wore the beige uniforms of Yemen’s elite forces and that others were plainclothes security officers. President Saleh denied at a press conference that government forces were involved, claiming that residents angry over the expanding protest camp had opened fire. He ordered the formation of a committee to investigate.

Doctors at a makeshift field hospital near the protest camp at Sanaa University confirmed at least 46 dead, three of them children. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

A Yemeni photojournalist, Jamal al-Sharaabi, was among the dead, medical officials said. He is the first journalist killed in the unrest.

Interior Minister Gen. Mouthar al-Masri, who is in charge of internal security forces, put the number of dead at 25 and the injured at 200.

Opposition groups in Yemen held an emergency meeting later Friday in which they defiantly called on all Yemenis to join in their peaceful protest. The groups denounced Friday’s violence, which they said was ordered by Saleh. They also called on the international community and U.N. Security Council to take “political and moral responsibility with measures to protect civilians.”

The United States, which supports Yemen’s government with $250 million in military aid this year alone to battle one of al-Qaida’s most active franchises, condemned the attack on protesters.

“Those responsible for today’s violence must be held accountable,” President Barack Obama said. He called on Saleh to adhere to his public pledge to allow peaceful demonstrations.

Instead, Saleh declared a 30-day nationwide state of emergency that formally gave his security forces a freer hand to confront demonstrators. The declaration bars citizens from carrying and using weapons.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon was “deeply troubled,” said his spokesman, Martin Nesirky. He “reiterates his call for utmost restraint and reminds the government of Yemen that it has an obligation to protect civilians.”

Demonstrators are demanding jobs, greater political freedoms and an end to government corruption.

In the latest defection by a political ally of the president, Nabil al-Faqih, the Yemeni tourism minister, resigned Friday from his Cabinet position and from the ruling party to protest the killings.

“This is the least I can do,” he said. Al-Faqih is the second minister to quit and the latest of several politicians to resign from Saleh’s Congress Party.

Throughout the unrest, security forces and government supporters have used live fire, rubber bullets, tear gas, sticks, knives and rocks against the protesters, who have only grown in number in Sanaa and in many other cities around the nation. The protesters say they won’t go until Saleh does and have rejected offers to discuss a unity government.

“They want to scare and terrorize us. They want to drag us into a cycle of violence — to make the revolution meaningless,” said Jamal Anaam, a 40-year-old activist camping out in the protest site.

He said government opponents would not follow the example of their counterparts in Libya who took up arms against Col. Moammar Gadhafi. “They want to repeat the Libyan experiment, but we refuse to be dragged into violence no matter what the price,” he said.

Friday’s violence showed the government of Saleh and his family are increasingly worried about losing power, said Gregory Johnsen, an expert on Yemen at Princeton University.

“He has been in power for more than three decades and he’s falling back on what he knows best, which is increasingly violent methods.”

The tactic is unlikely to work, he predicted.

“Yemen does not have a population that’s easily cowed, so I don’t think they will be put out by fear of death,” he said. “It’s a heavily armed country. Many of the people there are quite confident and capable of putting security into their own hands.”

Saleh and his weak government have faced down many serious challenges, often forging tricky alliances with restive tribes to delicately extend power beyond the capital. Most recently, he has battled an on-and-off, seven-year armed rebellion in the north, a secessionist movement in the south, and an al-Qaida offshoot that is of great concern to the U.S.

Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, which formed in January 2009, has moved beyond regional aims and attacked the West, including sending a suicide bomber who came terrifyingly close to blowing up a U.S.-bound airliner with a bomb sewn into his underwear. The device failed to detonate properly.

Yemen is also home to U.S.-born radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, who is believed to have offered inspiration to those attacking the U.S.

___

Karam reported from Cairo.

Link:
Yemeni police storm protest camp in Aden
(AP)



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