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Massive 8.9-magnitude quake hits Japan

Merlot

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Well all,

Japan 'overwhelmed by the scale of damage'

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42066622?gt1=43001

TAKAJO, Japan — A tide of bodies washed up along the coastline on Monday and crematoriums were overwhelmed as Japan faced a mounting humanitarian, nuclear and economic crisis following the massive earthquake and tsunami.

Millions of people were facing a fourth night without water, food or heating in near-freezing temperatures along the devastated northeast coast. Meanwhile, a third reactor at a nuclear power plant lost its cooling capacity, raising fears of a meltdown, while the Japanese stock market plunged over the likelihood of huge losses by Japanese industries including big names such as Toyota and Honda.

On the coastline of Miyagi prefecture, which took the full force of the tsunami, a Japanese police official said 1,000 bodies were found scattered across the coastline on Monday. The Japanese news agency Kyodo reported that 2,000 bodies washed up on two shorelines in Miyagi.

While the official death toll rose to nearly 1,900, the discovery of the washed-up bodies and other reports of deaths suggest the true number is much higher. In Miyagi, the police chief has said 10,000 people are estimated to have died in his province alone.

In nearby Soma, the crematorium was unable to handle the crush of bodies being brought in for funerals.

"We have already begun cremations, but we can only handle 18 bodies a day. We are overwhelmed and are asking other cities to help us deal with bodies. We only have one crematorium in town," said Katsuhiko Abe, an official in Soma.

In Japan, most people opt to cremate their dead, a process that requires permission first from local authorities. But the government took the rare step Monday of waiving that requirement to speed up funerals.

"The current situation is so extraordinary, and it is very likely that crematoriums are running beyond capacity," said Health Ministry official Yukio Okuda.

Friday's double-headed tragedy has caused unimaginable deprivation for people of this industrialized country that has not seen such hardships since World War II.

...

In many areas there is no running water, no power and five-hour lines for gasoline. People are suppressing hunger with instant noodles or rice balls while dealing with the loss of loved ones and homes.

"People are surviving on little food and water. Things are simply not coming," said Hajime Sato, a government official in Iwate prefecture, one of the three hardest hit.

He said authorities were receiving just 10 percent of the food and other supplies they need. Even body bags and coffins are running so short the government may turn to foreign funeral homes for help, he said.

"We have repeatedly asked the government to help us, but the government is overwhelmed by the scale of damage and enormous demand for food and water," he said.

Fifteen foreign teams, many equipped with search dogs and heavy lifting equipment, are also helping, with the largest from Russia, South Korea and the United States.

Many hospitals have either been wiped out or damaged, slowing treatment for those injured as well as those already hospitalized before the tragedy.

The pulverized coast has been hit by several hundred aftershocks, including a 6.2 on Monday that caused a new tsunami scare. Abandoning their search operations, soldiers told residents of the devastated shoreline in Soma, the worst hit town in Fukushima prefecture, to run to higher ground.
Story: Satellite photos show devastation in Japan

Sirens wailed and soldiers barked out orders: "Find high ground! Get out of here!" Several uniformed soldiers were seen leading an old woman up a muddy hillside. The warning turned out to be a false alarm.

Search parties arrived in Soma for the first time since Friday to dig out bodies. Ambulances stood by and body bags were laid out in an area cleared of debris, as firefighters used hand picks and chain saws to clear an indescribable jumble of broken timber, plastic sheets, roofs, sludge, twisted cars, tangled power lines and household goods.

Helicopters buzzed overhead, surveying the destruction that spanned the horizon. Ships were flipped over roads, a half mile inland. Officials said one-third of the city of 38,000 people was flooded and thousands were missing.

'Now we have nothing'
"I'm giving up hope," said Hajime Watanabe, 38, a construction industry worker who was the first in line at a closed gas station in Sendai, about 60 miles north of Soma. Just then, an emergency worker came over and told him that if the station opens at all, it would pump gasoline only to emergency teams and essential government workers.


continued...

:(

Merlot
 
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JH Fan

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Fine! but what Jap had created in south-east countries was been 10 times more death and 10 times more loss of economic.
Just a reminder....

Take it easy with your next cup'o soup man !
Don't see your point and numbers don't add up anyway.
 

JH Fan

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...should be totally irrelevant.

It is. my post was for those who compare past tragedies to today's which we tend to 'exagerate' because of instant tv, social medias, etc...
Clavie's post is a good exemple of this !

There was no judgement of people in mine.
 
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Monty2383

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Felt that one

OK nothing to compare to Japan, but felt this one on the West Island. Second one since June.
 

Montreal Sex City

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Only once in a life time !

Tremblement de terre
Tsunami
Volcan en éruption
Radiation

et la ...

la neige !

:(

Ayoye !
 

Montreal Sex City

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JH Fan

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Only once in a life time !

Tremblement de terre
Tsunami
Volcan en éruption
Radiation

et la ...

la neige !

:(

Ayoye !

Comme Haiti...

Tremblement de terre : Bilan : 230,000 morts, 300,000blessés et 1.2millions sans abris.
Cholera : Bilan : + de 115,000 contaminés, + 4500 morts, 28,000 hospitalisés.
Le bilan estimé pour la fin de l'année env. 800,000 contaminés et plus de 11,000 morts

Il fallait qu'ils se tapent l'ouragan Tomas en plus qui a aggravé l'épidemie.
 

EagerBeaver

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The guys who are fighting to contain the radiation within that nuclear reactor are wearing cheap hazmat suits that could not safeguard them from pipe smoke, never mind the vast amounts of radiation that is pouring out of those rods and into their bodies. It's amazing to me that none of you have mentioned this. They are hopelessly but valiantly fighting to contain radiation inside an aged, decrepit reactor. In a year or two they will be fighting cancers ravaging their livers, their spleens, their lymph nodes, their pancreases. We have seen this all happen before.

We cannot even control our own technology. In my home state of Connecticut, we have two very old nuclear power plants that have the exact same reactors as the ones that are imploding in Japan. Can they stand up to any and every natural disaster? I doubt it. We have to start thinking about our future as citizens of this planet.
 

Montreal Sex City

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Comme Haiti...

Tremblement de terre : Bilan : 230,000 morts, 300,000blessés et 1.2millions sans abris.
Cholera : Bilan : + de 115,000 contaminés, + 4500 morts, 28,000 hospitalisés.
Le bilan estimé pour la fin de l'année env. 800,000 contaminés et plus de 11,000 morts

Il fallait qu'ils se tapent l'ouragan Tomas en plus qui a aggravé l'épidemie.

C'est tout simplement incroyable mais vrai !

Concernant le désastre nucléaire en cours, apparament que les investisseurs de tels projets
seraient en train de revoir leur affaires ... A moins que ce soit gros un léchage d'image, cela
serait tout une première. Imaginez ca, le '' bullshit walks & money talks '' perdrait la face !

:rolleyes:
 

JH Fan

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You have to admire the emperor though !

'I hope from my heart that all people will pull together and care for each other to survive during this difficult time'.
So here's the time to show how much he care about his people !

After all, apparently the cost for Japan to have an emperor is around 200millions per year.

So maybe they should cut on his expense a bit this year wouldn't you think ?
 

Montreal Sex City

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The guys who are fighting to contain the radiation within that nuclear reactor are wearing cheap hazmat suits that could not safeguard them from pipe smoke, never mind the vast amounts of radiation that is pouring out of those rods and into their bodies. It's amazing to me that none of you have mentioned this. They are hopelessly but valiantly fighting to contain radiation inside an aged, decrepit reactor. In a year or two they will be fighting cancers ravaging their livers, their spleens, their lymph nodes, their pancreases. We have seen this all happen before.

We cannot even control our own technology. In my home state of Connecticut, we have two very old nuclear power plants that have the exact same reactors as the ones that are imploding in Japan. Can they stand up to any and every natural disaster? I doubt it. We have to start thinking about our future as citizens of this planet.

That is exactly what it is. There is nothing to do with those radiations.
Beleive it or not, they know before entering there what will be left for
their futur, wich is nothing. They are volonteers to compare to past
nuclear disaster where the sended people where not informed about
the consequences.

Something about this from it :

When the Wind Blows (1986)

When the Wind Blows (film)
 

JH Fan

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Governments don't care about our health. All they really care about is money.

Isn't it amazing then... how people think that voting once in every 4 years is giving us a 'Democracy' and ...think about all the amount of time wasted in arguing on gov. policies.
 

JH Fan

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We can learn a lot from the earthquake in Japan. We can face down serious questions about our energy. We can recognize that as much as we have learned in the last 100 years, we still have so much more to discover. Most importantly, we can learn that we are a durable and compassionate people capable of overcoming great adversity with the assistance of our fellow human beings.

Human's never learn from hardship. They BS about it but they don't.
It's built into our nervous system to forget the pain.

So far almost everything that we have been warned since I was a kid happened.
Except the Leafs winning the cup.

But it will come...
 

JH Fan

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Can they stand up to any and every natural disaster? I doubt it.

Doesn't have to be natural... who says when there will be the first 'nuclear terrorist attack' ?

Even the bogus attempt on time square last year has shown that US or Canada or... aren't really prepared.

And thanks to our supreme capitalism... everytime something big happens in one country, the entire world gets it.

Super intelligent !
 

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