martedì 21 maggio 2013

Fukushima: US sailors sue Japan's TEPCO

US sailors sue Japan's TEPCO for post-quake radiation exposure




Nicholas A. Groesch / Reuters file
Sailors aboard the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan wash down the flight deck to remove potential radiation contamination while operating off the coast of Japan providing humanitarian assistance in support of Operation Tomodachi on March 22, 2011.
A group of U.S. Navy personnel involved in the humanitarian effort after Japan's March 2011 earthquake and tsunami have filed a lawsuit against the Tokyo Electric Power Co. for more than $200 million in compensation, punitive damages and future medical costs for exposure to radiation that leaked from the damaged Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant at the time.
The plaintiffs include eight troops serving on the USS Ronald Reagan aircraft carrier — one of whom was pregnant at the time of the alleged exposure — and her daughter.
They charge that the utility, known as TEPCO, "knowingly and negligently caused, permitted and allowed misleading information concerning the true condition of the (plant) to be disseminated to the public, including the U.S. Navy Department," according to the complaint filed on Dec. 21 in a U.S. federal court in San Diego.

The U.S. carrier was positioned just offshore from the damaged Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant, which and suffered a meltdown which triggered the release of high levels of radiation into the air and water. The plaintiffs are suffering a variety of symptoms that attorney Paul Garner says were caused by the exposure, including rectal bleeding, thyroid problems and persistent migraine headaches, and all face an increased chance of developing cancer and requiring expensive medical procedures.
"The carrier was less than two football fields away from the Fukushima Daiichi when it released a cloud of radiation," said Garner, speaking to NBC News on Thursday.
He said the crew was unknowingly exposed to high levels of radiation in numerous ways, including when they cleared the carrier's decks of snow that was contaminated, and washed down the helicopters with sea water that was contaminated.

Archival video: Of all the aftershocks that could hit Japan, nothing frightens the world more than the possibility of a devastating nuclear disaster. NBC's Anne Thompson.
The complaint said that by relying on misrepresentations about the situation by TEPCO, the U.S. Navy was "lulled into a false sense of security," believing it was "safe to operate with the waters adjacent to the FNPP, without doing research and testing that would have revealed the problems."
It goes on to charge that through its conduct, TEPCO "rendered the Plaintiffs infirm and poisoned their bodies. The Plaintiffs must now endure a lifetime of radiation poisoning and suffering which could have and should have been avoided."

Archival video: Damon Moglen of Friends of the Earth discusses the potential dangers that still loom in Japan following an explosion at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear facility.
The suit is seeking $10 million in damages for each plaintiff, plus $30 million in punitive damages and a judgment requiring TEPCO to create $100 million fund to pay for their medical costs, including monitoring and treatments.
TEPCO could not immediately be reached for comment by NBC News.
A TEPCO spokesman reached by The Japan Times said the company had not yet received the complaint.
"We will consider a response after examining the claim," said Yusuke Kunikage, according to the Times.
Since the disaster, TEPCO has operated a fund to compensate victims in Japan.
Garner said that he didn't believe his clients would get justice through the Japanese system, which is why the suit was filed in a U.S. court. The complaint was served to TEPCO's office in Washington, D.C. on Thursday, he said.
"We need the U.S. justice system to make this right," Garner said.

sabato 18 maggio 2013

Uranium hexafluoride found in Hamburg

Photo: DPA

Burning ship had tonnes of 


radioactive material

Published: 17 May 13 
After a freighter went up in flames at the start of the month while carrying radioactive material into Hamburg's harbour, it has emerged that the German port city receives such hazardous cargo up to seven times a month.
Fire fighters said they had only narrowly been able to prevent a catastrophe on May 1st when the freighter "Atlantic Cartier" caught fire - complete with its radioactive load.

Tens of thousands of people were gathered just a few hundred metres away to celebrate the Evangelical church day when the ship went up in dramatic flames.

Fire fighters were able to quickly identify the containers which had the radioactive cargo and remove them before anything worse happened. The authorities confirmed that the ship had been carrying around nine tonnes of the dangerous uranium hexafluoride, a toxic chemical used in the nuclear industry, as well as four tonnes of explosives, the Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper reported.

The Green party forced the information into the open with a written question to the city government, local radio station NDR 90.3 reported.

"Hamburg just managed to scrape past a catastrophe on May 1st," Anjes Tjarks, Green spokesman for harbour policy told the Süddeutsche Zeitung.

"It is a monstrosity that the government did not inform the public about this near-catastrophe of its own initiative. One has to speak of a cover-up attempt."

Yet Frank Reschreiter, spokesman for Hamburg's interior authority, said the dangerous cargo was known about - which was why the fire fighters knew to remove the relevant containers. Nothing dangerous leaked, he said.

Now the city government has admitted that radioactive material had been brought into the harbour on Atlantic Container Line ships 21 times in the past three months.

Concrete information about which ships were being used to take the radioactive substances, and which route they were taking, would not be revealed, Hamburg's government said.

Most of the shipments were due for a uranium-enriching facility in Lingen, Lower Saxony, NDR 90.3 reported on Friday.

The Local/hc

martedì 7 maggio 2013

Siria: uranio impoverito in raid Israele

Siria: uranio impoverito in raid Israele

Lo affermano fonti governative Damasco citate da emittente russa

07 maggio, 14:34http://www.ansa.it/web/notizie/rubriche/mondo/2013/05/07/Siria-uranio-impoverito-raid-Israele_8665858.html
Siria: uranio impoverito in raid Israele(ANSA) - ROMA, 7 MAG - Israele avrebbe usato proiettili con uranio impoverito nel raid di sabato che ha colpito un centro di ricerca militare a nord di Damasco. Lo affermano fonti governative siriane citate in forma anonima da Russia Today.

''L'esplosione ha creato un enorme fungo di fuoco color oro, segno che sono stati usati proiettili con uranio impoverito'', afferma la fonte, che aggiunge che lo scopo del raid aveva un obiettivo ''piu' politico che militare: e' stato un ultimatum contro di noi''.

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