Reading this article from March, 2011 is very educative. We have to go back to that time to read open and honest reporting of the time. This was written before the US government changed its story and began its cover-up ('Plume-Gate") and to tell citizens that there was 'no danger'.
The reality, as we know, is very different.
Panicked
residents start to flee Tokyo as radiation levels rise after THIRD
blast at stricken nuclear power plant
- Radiation leaking directly into the air from stricken Fukushima nuclear plant
- Power station has now suffered three reactor explosions and one fire
- One reactor core 'exposed to the atmosphere' through crack in containment wall
- Radiation levels up to ten times higher than normal in Tokyo
- Mass exodus as thousands residents flee towns close to reactor
- Experts warn of cancer risk
- Japan seeks help from U.S. to spray water on over-heating reactors from helicopters
15
March, 2011
Scores
of terrified residents began to flee Tokyo today as a nuclear power
plant destroyed by the tsunami threatened to send a cloud of
radioactive dust across Japan.
The
Fukushima Dai-ichi plant suffered a third reactor explosion last
night, another reactor on the site caught fire - and officials
today announced the wall of one reactor was cracked.
Radiation
levels have soared acoss the country as radioactive material spewed
directly into the atmosphere while emergency crews fought to avoid a
catastrophic meltdown.
Levels
of radiation were ten times higher than normal in the capital today,
as experts warned that people in Japan could face an increased cancer
risk even if the crisis does not deteriorate.
People examine goods on an almost empty shelf at a store in Tokyo. Other residents are fleeing the capital, despite officials insisting that radiation levels are safe
Lufthansa
said all planes will be tested for radioactivity when they return to
Germany 'as a precautionary measur'. Austrian airlines sent a
military expert to Tokyo to test their aircraft.
Fukushima
is likely to be the worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in 1986 -
after Friday's tsunami knocked out cooling systems at the plant which
lies 150 miles north of Tokyo.
That
caused three reactors at the plant to overheat, with one exploding on
Saturday, another yesterday and the third late last night. A fourth
reactor caught fire overnight but the blaze was extinguished today.
The
fire was in a fuel storage pond - an area where used nuclear fuel is
kept cool - and officials said 'radioactivity is being released
directly into the atmosphere.'
The
reactor core is thought to be exposed to the air after the
containment wall was cracked. But the radiation escaping is thought
to be steam from the storage pond, rather than more deadly radiation
from exposed fuel rods.
Officials
said radiation levels at the power plant gate were falling this
afternoon.
Destroyed:
This before and after shot shows the Fukushima nuclear plant before
the tsunami, left, and location of and damage to the four reactors,
right, after the explosions
Intact:
the four reactor buildings at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant before the
blast. Three of the buildings have blown up and there was a fire at
the other
Serious:
the graphic above shows the International Atomic Agency's system of
rating nuclear accidents. Fukushima is officially a level four but
French nuclear scientists today said it was definitely a level six
WORST
JAPANESE STOCK MARKET PERFORMANCE SINCE 1987
The
Japanese stock market has suffered its worst two days for more than
20 years in the wake of the tsunami and growing nuclear crisis.
There
are fears any deterioration in the Fukushima crisis will trigger
panic selling of Japanese shares.
Tokyo's
Nikkei index of leading shares closed down 10.6 per cent today after
a 6 per cent fall yesterday.
And
when Prime MInister Naoto Kan suggested that the country faces more
radiation leaks today, shares plunged by 14 per cent before
recovering slightly
Nevertheless,
plant officials are seeking the help of the American military to
spray the overheating reactors with water from helicopters, to avoid
exposing workers to 'very acute' levels of radiation on the ground at
the plant.
Although
forecasters say wind is blowing the harmful material out to sea, some
Tokyo residents began to flee and others started panic buying
emergency supplies.
Health
officials have stressed that the radiation levels outside the 18-mile
exclusion zone are not harmful, but experts warn residents could
still face an increased cancer risk.
Lam
Ching-wan, a chemical pathologist at the University of Hong Kong,
said: 'The explosions could expose the population to longer-term
radiation which can raise the risk of cancer. These are thyroid
cancer, bone cancer and leukaemia. Children and foetuses are
especially vulnerable.'
As
Tokyo residents began panic buying, Don Quixote, a multi-storey,
24-hour general store in Tokyo sold out of radios, flashlights,
candles and sleeping bags.
Scores
of residents were also fleeing, with the Foreign Office advising
against all non-essential travel to Tokyo and the north-east of
Japan.
China
also said it would evacuate its citizens from areas worst affected
and several embassies advised staff and citizens to leave affected
areas. Tourists cut short vacations and multinational companies
either urged staff to leave or said they were considering plans to
move outside Tokyo.
'Everyone
is going out of the country today,' said Gunta Brunner, a 25-year-old
creative director from Argentina. 'With the radiation, it's like you
cannot escape and you can't see it.'
'No
risk': A map of wind patterns around the Fukushima blast. Forecasters
say that prevailing winds will take radioactive material out to open
ocean, but radiation levels are rising around Tokyo
AMERICA
ON RADIATION ALER
Japanese
Prime Minister Naoto Kan this morning admitted that there was a
possibility of more leaks. He said in a televised address: 'The
possibility of further radioactive leakage is heightening. We are
making every effort to prevent the leak from spreading. I know that
people are very worried but I would like to ask you to act calmly.'
Chief
Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano also issued a stern warning to
residents in the danger zone this morning.
He
said: 'Please do not go outside. Please stay indoors. Please close
windows and make your homes airtight .These are figures that
potentially affect health. There is no mistake about that.
'Now
we are talking about levels [of leaking radiation] that can damage
human health. These are readings taken near the area where we believe
the releases are happening. Far away, the levels should be lower.'
Some
70,000 people had already been evacuated from a 12-mile radius around
the Dai-ichi complex before the third blast last night. About 140,000
remain in the new warning zone. The crisis has injured 11 plant
workers and exposed 160 people to significant levels of radiation.
All
but 50 workers have been evacuated from the Fukushima plant, with the
remaining employees frantically trying to keep pumping sea water into
the reactors to cool them and stop a catastrophic meltdown.
Although
they have protective suits, they risk exposure to 'very acute' levels
of radiation that seem likely to have serious consequences for their
health.
There
were reports that a fire engine pumping water in to the Number Two
reactor failed shortly before last night's explosion -which would
have led to an increase in temperature inside the reactor and could
have caused the blast.
Edano
warned that there were signs that fuel rods were melting in all three
reactors. ‘Although we cannot directly check it, it’s highly
likely to be happening,’ he added.
Experts
said the nightmare scenario at Fukushima was of a meltdown which
triggers a massive build-up of pressure inside the containment unit.
If the unit cracks, a plume of radioactive dust and gas would spill
hundreds of miles into the air.
Officials
have been struggling to pacify the public's concerns about
radioactive material escaping into the atmosphere.
The
Mayor of Fukushima City, Mr Tananori Seto yesterday warned of
grave consequences for people who were living within a 20km range of
the power station if they stepped out from their homes.
He
admitted that although evacuations had begun in the past two days,
many people had remained in their homes - and now they were trapped
there.
'It
is too dangerous to go outside and even if they did they would not be
able to be transported to a safe place because we have no fuel for
our vehicles,' he said.
'We
need more information from the government. We aren't getting enough
information.'
Mr
Seto said he hoped those who were still in their homes would keep a
watch on their TVs and listen to their radios for updates.
'Don't
even step outside to hang out your washing,' he said. 'If you've
already done your washing, don't bring it in from the line because it
will be contaminated.'
People
have been told to take showers if they think they have been
contaminated but in many places there is no running water.
Water
stored in outside tanks, officials warned, would be contaminated
anyway.
Serious
questions now surrounding the safety of the three crippled reactors.
The
latest explosion last night is feared to have cracked the main
protective barrier around reactor number two at the plant.
The
International Atomic Agency said radioactive material is leaking
'directly' into the air from the stricken plant at a rate of 400
millisieverts per hour. Anyone exposed to over 100
millisieverts a year risks cancer.
Engineers
are using sea water to cool overheating nuclear fuel rods.
That
is a sign of the desperation of the situation because the corrosive
salt water will put the reactors permenantly out of action. It is the
first time in 57 years that sea water has been used to cool a
reactor.
Although
the plant’s three working reactors shut down automatically when the
magnitude nine earthquake struck on Friday, the cooling systems which
keep the radioactive uranium and plutonium fuel rods cool have been
hit by a series of failures.
The
three reactor explosions were triggered as engineers released steam
to prevent a dangerous build-up of pressure inside the sealed
reactor. At superheated temperatures inside the core the water vapour
had split into hydrogen and oxygen which ignited, destroying the
outer building and injuring 11 people, one seriously.
Without
coolant, fuel rods can overheat and melt. In a serious meltdown,
radioactive molten material falls through the floor of the
containment vessel into the ground underneath.
After
Japan’s request to the United States for help cooling the reactors,
the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission said it was considering
providing technical advice.
President
Barack Obama offered any help the U.S. could provide to help recover
from its ‘multiple disasters’.
Scientists
say there are serious dangers but little risk of a catastrophe
similar to the 1986 blast in Chernobyl, where the reactor did not
have a containment shell.
Some said the length of time since the
crisis began showed the chemical reactions inside the reactor were
not moving quickly toward a complete meltdown.
Fight
for control: A third explosion rocks the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear
plant last night where engineers are struggling to avoid a nuclear
catastrophe
Although
experts said winds are currently blowing most harmful material out
across the Pacific,thousands of residents are also fleeing towns
nearer the reactor on the north east coast of Japan.
The
situation is worse for 140,000 people who live within an 18-mile
exclusion zone around the plant. They were today ordered to stay
indoors or be exposed to a dangerous level of radiation.
There
is now a 30m no-fly zone around the reactor. The emergency has
sparked a mass exodus as far away as Tokyo. Planes out of the
Japanese capital were crammed.
France
advised its citizens to leave Tokyo, Austria moved its embassy from
Tokyo 250 miles south-west to Osaka and the US government told
Americans to avoid travel to Japan.
The
U.S. military told soldiers and families at its bases in Yokosuka and
Atsugi to stay indoors. America diverted warships away from the east
coast which was devastated by Friday’s earthquake and tsunami which
has killed at least 10,000.
There are growing fears that nuclear fall out from the Fukushima reactor could hit the United States.
Scientists warned yesterday of a 'worst-case scenario' in which the highly radioactive material could be blasted into the atmosphere and blown towards the West Coast by the Pacific jet stream - as seen in the graphic above.
They said it could be picked up by powerful 30,000ft winds, carrying the debris across the Pacific and hitting the West Coast. Some estimates claimed the radiation could arrive on America's shores by this evening.
'Right now it's quite possible that there could be some radiation floating over the United States,' said Nuclear Regulatory Commission spokesman David McIntyre.
THE DANGERS OF RADIATION
The risks of radiation on the human body
The Japanese authorities say the radiation levels from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant could now post a potential health risk. Here we look at the health risks...
Why is the radiation dangerous?
Why is the radiation dangerous?
Ionising radiation poses a threat to human health because it can damage human cells at the molecular level and disrupt the body's natural control processes. Moderate exposure can increase the risk of cancer, while high levels this can cause widespread organ failure.
What is a dangerous dose?
A radiation dose is expressed in units of Sievert (Sv). On average, a person is exposed to approximately 3.0 mSv/year, most of which is due to natural sources such as cosmic rays.
The readings at the Fukushima site rose beyond safe limits - 400 millisieverts per hour (mSv/hr), after a third explosion last night. So far nearly 200 people have been taken to hospital with suspected exposure
According to the World Nuclear Authority a radiation dose of 100mSV a year is the lowest level at which any increased risk of cancer is evident.
A cumulative dose of 1,000 millisieverts would increase the incidence of fatal cancer by about five per cent.
A single 1,000 mSv dose causes radiation sickness such as nausea but not death. A single dose of 5,000 mSv would kill about half of those exposed to it within a month.
However, Lam Ching-wan from the University of Hong Kong said: 'Very acute radiation, like that which happened in Chernobyl and to the Japanese workers at the nuclear power station, is unlikely for the population.'
Tokyo reported slightly elevated radiation levels, but officials said the increase was too small to threaten the 39 million people in and around the capital.
What are the symptoms?
What are the symptoms?
Moderate exposure to the radiation will cause symptoms including vomiting, diarrhoea and headaches. It also raises the risk of cancer in the long-term.
High levels of radiation also causes radiation burns, hair loss and potentially fatal damage to internal organs.
How is it treated?
How is it treated?
Further contamination is reduced by removing clothes and shoes, and washing the skin with soap and water.
Drugs can increase white blood-cell production to counter any damage that may have occurred to the bone marrow. Potassium iodine tablets before radiation exposure can stop the radioactive iodine from lodging in the thyroid.
A dye known as Prussian blue can also be used to remove certain radioactive materials from the body.
How has the Japanese Government responded?
People living within 18 miles of the plant have been evacuated or urged to stay indoors and make their homes airtight.
How has the Japanese Government responded?
People living within 18 miles of the plant have been evacuated or urged to stay indoors and make their homes airtight.
They have also distributed 230,000 units of stable iodine to evacuation centres from the area around Fukushima Daiichi and Fukushima Daini nuclear power plants as a precaution. The tablets block radioactive iodine from being taken into the thyroid gland, protecting it from damage and potential cancer.
The 70 workers working to safeguard the nuclear complex are all wearing protective gear. They are being rotated in and out of the danger zone quickly to reduce their radiation exposure. One death has been confirmed after a worker was caught in an explosion.
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