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ARTICLE ARCHIVE
Thursday
Apr282011

800 protest Flamanville reactor April 23 in Normandy

Marking the 25 years since the Chernobyl catastrophe, Didier and Paulette Anger, of the Normandy anti-nuclear group, CRILAN, organized a rally near the Flamanville nuclear site where a new EPR reactor is under construction. An estimated 800 people rallied near the site, followed by an enormous water truck that activists used, "dousing" symbolic reactor flames with buckets of water.

Thursday
Apr282011

Australian Aboriginal leader expresses solidarity with people of Fukushima

Yvonne Margarula, the clan leader, or senior traditional owner of the Mirrar people in Australia, has written to UN Secretary General, Ban Ki Moon expressing solidarity with and empathy for the people affected by the nuclear disaster in Fukushima, Japan, In her letter, Margarula expresses sorrow that the uranium that was used in the Fukushima reactors was mined on the land of the Mirrar. The Mirrar have been confronting and opposing deadly uranium mining on their lands for many years. In particular, they are still battling the proposed Jabiluka uranium mine potentially destined for their land and are already subject to the impacts of the enormous Ranger Uranium Mine, also situated on traditional land owned by the Mirrar people. Read Margarula's letter here.

Wednesday
Apr272011

ACTION NEEDED: sign petition to STOP increased radiation exposure to children in Fukushima 

From the petition: "We urgently demand the withdrawal of the Japanese Government’s inhumane decision to force 20mSv per year radiation exposure onto children.

"On April 19th, the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) notified the Board of Education and related institutions in Fukushima Prefecture the level of 20 millisieverts per year (mSv/y) as a Radiation Safety Standard for schools in Fukushima Prefecture. This is the standard to be used for school grounds and buildings.

"...The Labour Standards Act prohibits those under the age of 18 from working under these conditions. Forcing children to be exposed to such radiation doses is an exceedingly inhumane decision. Therefore, we condemn this in the strongest terms.

"20 mSv/y is comparable to the [legally] recognized dose for inducing leukemia in nuclear power plant workers. It is also comparable to the maximum dose allowed for nuclear power plant workers in Germany." Also see the Japan Federation of Bar Associations statement opposing this level of radiation exposure. Beyond Nuclear has released a press statement today.  Sign the petition.

Wednesday
Apr272011

UPDATE 1-Q+A-What's going on at Japan's damaged nuclear power plant?

"Japanese engineers are struggling to gain control of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, 240 km (150 miles) north of Tokyo, which was seriously damaged by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami.

Two of the six reactors at the plant, operated by Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO), are considered stable but the other four are volatile." Reuters

Wednesday
Apr272011

Photo exhibit & presentation at Dartmouth on Chernobyl's 25th commemoration

Kevin Kamps of Beyond Nuclear spoke alongside Kenneth Yalowitz, John Sloan Dickey Center for International Understanding Director and former U.S. Ambassador to Belarus, to commemorate the 25th year since Chernobyl Unit #4 reactor exploded and burned in Ukraine on April 26, 1986. An exhibit by social documentary photographer Gabriela Bulisova, sponsored by Beyond Nuclear and the Sierra Club, and hosted by the Dickey Center, opened after the presentations. “Life on the Edge … The Half-Lives and Half-Truths of Chernobyl” will remain on display in the Russo Gallery in Haldeman Hall for three weeks. Gabi's photos are viewable online.