June 19, 2013

Earthquake in China leaves 124 dead, 2,600 injured

 Earthquake in China leaves 124 dead, 2,600 injured

Story Highlights

124 dead, more than 2,600 injured
A 2008 earthquake in Sichuan killed 90,000 people
U.S. Geological Survey says a 6.6 hit at a depth of less than 8 miles

(AP) — A powerful earthquake struck the steep hills of China’s southwestern Sichuan province Saturday, leaving at least 124 people dead and more than 2,600 injured, nearly five years after a devastating quake wreaked widespread damage across the region.

Saturday’s quake, while not as destructive as that in 2008, toppled buildings, triggered landslides and disrupted phone and power connections in mountainous Lushan county. The village of Longmen was hit particularly hard, with authorities saying nearly all the buildings there had been destroyed in a frightening minute-long shaking by the quake.

“It was such a big quake that everyone was scared,” said a woman who answered a phone at a hours later and declined to give her name. “We all fled for our lives.”

Rescuers turned the square outside the Lushan County Hospital into a triage center, where medical personnel bandaged bleeding victims, according to footage on China Central Television. Rescuers dynamited boulders that had fallen across roads to reach Longmen and other damaged areas lying farther up the mountain valleys, state media reported.

The China Earthquake Administration said at least 124 people had died. The government of Ya’an city, which administers Lushan, said in a statement that more than 2,600 people were injured, 330 of them severely.

The quake — measured by the earthquake administration at -7.0 and the U.S. Geological Survey at 6.6 — struck the steep hills of Lushan county shortly after 8 a.m., when many people were at home, sleeping or having breakfast. People in their and wrapped in ran into the streets of Ya’an and even the provincial capital of Chengdu, 115 (70 miles) east of Lushan, according to photos, video and accounts posted online.

The quake’s shallow depth, less than 13 kilometers (8 miles), likely magnified the impact, and CCTV showed footage from local security cameras that were shaking. Chengdu’s airport shut down for about an hour before reopening, though many flights were canceled or delayed, state media said.

Lushan, where the quake struck, lies where the fertile Sichuan plain meets foothills that eventually rise to the Tibetan plateau and sits atop the Longmenshan fault. It was along that fault line that the devastating magnitude-7.9 quake struck on May 12, 2008, leaving more than 90,000 people dead or missing and presumed dead in one of the worst natural disasters to strike China in recent decades.

“It was just like May 12,” Liu Xi, a writer in Ya’an city, who was jolted awake by Saturday’s quake, said via a private message on his account on Sina Corporation’s Twitter-like Weibo service. “All the home decorations fell at once, and the old house cracked.”

Xinhua said the well-known Bifengxia panda preserve, which is near Lushan, was not affected by the quake. Dozens of pandas were moved to Bifengxia from another preserve, Wolong, after its habitat was wrecked by the 2008 quake.

As in most natural disasters, the government mobilized thousands of soldiers and others — 7,000 people by Saturday afternoon — sending excavators and other heavy machinery as well as tents, blankets and other emergency supplies. One soldier died after the vehicle that he and a dozen others were in slipped off the road and rolled down an embankment, state media reported.

Premier Li Keqiang flew to Ya’an to direct rescue efforts, and he and President Xi Jinping ordered officials and rescuers to make saving people the top priority, Xinhua said.

With roads blocked for several hours after the quake, the military surveyed the disaster area by air. Aerial photos released by the military and shown on showed individual houses in ruins in Lushan and outlying villages flattened into . The roofs of some taller buildings appeared to have slipped off, exposing the floors beneath them.

A person whose posts to the micro-blogging account “Qingyi Riverside” on Weibo carried a locator geotag for Lushan said many buildings collapsed and that people could spot helicopters hovering above.

The earthquake administration said there had been at least 627 , including two of magnitude-5.0 or higher.

“It’s too dangerous,” said a person with the Weibo account Chengduxinglin and with a Lushan geotag. “Even the aftershocks are scary.”

While rescuers and state media rushed to the disaster scene, China’s active social media users filled the information gap. They posted photos of people rushing to streets for safety and of buildings flattened by the quake. They shared information on the availability of phone services, apparently through data services.

Huge earthquake hits Iran, hundreds feared dead

498db0147e6a95855aae2eba900fbc24 Huge earthquake hits Iran, hundreds feared dead

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

NEW: declared in Saravan area, Iranian state media reports
At least 40 people feared dead, Iranian state media says, citing local reports
The quake’s is in near the border with Pakistan
The earthquake is preliminarily measured at 7.8 , the says

(CNN) — At least 40 people are feared dead in Iran after a powerful earthquake near its border with Pakistan, Iran’s state-run Press TV reported Tuesday, citing local reports.

The earthquake was preliminarily measured at 7.8 magnitude, the U.S. Geological Survey said.

The epicenter of the quake, which struck about 3:15 p.m. local time, was about 50 miles (80 ) north of the city of Saravan, the center said.

A state of emergency has been declared in the Saravan area, and rescue workers have been deployed from other provinces, the state-run IRNA news agency reported.

Carrieann Bedwell, a USGS seismologist, said a 7.8- was “a large event for any area” and could be expected to cause damage in inhabited places.

Aftershocks can be expected for days or weeks after a quake of that magnitude, she said.

The USGS placed the epicenter 53 miles east-southeast of the of Khash, 103 miles northeast of Iranshahr and 123 miles southeast of Zahedan.

Shafiq Ahmed, an official with Pakistan’s meteorological department, told CNN the tremor, which he put at magnitude 7.9, struck inside southern Iran, near the border with Pakistan.

Tremors were felt in southern Pakistan, including the city of Karachi, and across Balochistan province from Gwadar on the southern coast to and the border with Iran.

Taghi Akhavan, an employee at Shaygan Hotel on the Iranian resort island of Kish, said he felt the quake around 3:30 p.m. local time.

He said several guests also reported feeling what they described as a mild tremor, but the hotel did not evacuate guests. He said he has not seen any damage.

Journalist Rabia Ali was among those to feel the quake in Karachi.

“I was at home. I was in my bed, and the bed started moving for a good 15 seconds,” she said. “We realized it was an earthquake and we started evacuating. Everyone came out onto the street and started praying. The children were crying.”

She said that she had not seen any damage in her neighborhood and that things have now calmed down.

The earthquake was felt as far away as Abu Dhabi, where buildings shook for 40 seconds or more, but it’s not yet clear what damage has been caused across the region.

It was measured at a preliminary depth of 15 kilometers (9.3 miles.)

The latest earthquake comes on the heels of another last week in southern Iran, which left at least 37 people dead.

That quake, centered near the city of Kaki, was measured at magnitude 6.3. It did not damage the Bushehr , just over 60 miles away, according to Iranian state media.

CNN’s Reza Sayah, Mitra Mobasherat, Nasir Habib, Leone Lakhani, Saima Mohsin and Christine Theodorou contributed to this report.

Tsunami kills at least five in Solomons after big Pacific quake

323988 Tsunami kills at least five in Solomons after big Pacific quake

() – A powerful 8.0 earthquake set off a tsunami that killed at least five people in a remote part of the Solomon Islands on Wednesday and triggered evacuations across the South Pacific as island nations issued tsunami alerts.

The quake struck 340 km (211 miles) east of Kira Kira in the Solomons, the in Hawaii said as it issued warnings for the Solomons and other South Pacific nations including Australia and New Zealand. It later canceled the warnings for the outlying regions.

A tsunami measuring 0.9 metres (three feet) hit near the town of Lata on the remote Santa Cruz island, swamping some villages and the town’s main airport as people fled to safety on .

More than three dozen up to magnitude 6.6 rocked the region in the hours after the quake, the U.S. Geological Survey said.

Lata hospital’s director of nursing, Augustine Pilve, told New Zealand television that five people had been killed, including a boy about 10 years old, adding that more casualties were possible as officials made their way to at least three villages that may have been hit.

“It’s more likely that other villages along the coast of Santa Cruz may be affected,” he said.

Disaster officials in the Solomon Islands capital Honiara told the Solomon Islands Broadcasting Corp. that they believed six people were dead and that five villages had suffered damage.

Solomon Islands Police Commissioner John Lansley said it was too early to fully assess the damage or casualty numbers, and said authorities hoped to send aircraft to the region on Thursday to help determine the extent of the damage.

Luke Taula, a fisheries officer in Lata, said he watched the tsunami as it came in small tidal surges rather than as one large wave.

“We have small waves come in, then go out again, then come back in. The waves have reached the airport terminal,” he told Reuters by telephone.

The worst damage was to villages on the western side of a point that protects the main township, he said.

“There are reports that some communities have been badly hit, their houses have been damaged by the waves.”

About 5,000 people lived in and around the town, but the area was deserted as people fled to higher ground, Taula said.

HOT SPOT

The Solomons, perched on the geologically active “Pacific Ring of Fire”, were hit by a devastating tsunami following an 8.1 magnitude quake in 2007. At least 50 people were killed then and dozens left missing and more than 13 villages destroyed.

“It’s an area that is very prone to ,” said Jonathan Bathgate, seismologist at Geoscience Australia. “We’ve had seven 6-plus magnitude in this region since January 31, so it has been very active in the past week.”

Initial signs were that the tremor was a thrust quake, in which vertical movement in the continental plates generates higher risk of tsunami, Bathgate added.

Authorities in the Solomons, Fiji, Guam and elsewhere had urged residents to higher ground before the Pacific Center canceled its alerts.

“The earthquake would have to be quite a bit bigger to make a much more sizeable tsunami,” said Brian Shiro, for the center in Hawaii.

(Reporting by James Grubel in CANBERRA,; Additional reporting by Michael Perry and Lincoln Feast in SYDNEY and Alex Dobuzinskis in LOS ANGELES)

World: Strong quake hits Japan’s Fukushima

big World: Strong quake hits Japans Fukushima

() – A strong quake centered off shook buildings as far away as Tokyo on Friday and triggered a one-meter tsunami in an area devastated by last year’s disaster, but there were no immediate reports of deaths or serious damage.

The quake had a preliminary magnitude of 7.3, the U.S. Geological Survey said, adding that there was no risk of a widespread tsunami.

The March 2011 earthquake and following tsunami killed nearly 20,000 people and triggered the world’s worst in 25 years when the Fukushima-Daiichi nuclear plant was destroyed, leaking radiation into the sea and air.

Workers at the plant were ordered to move to higher ground after Friday’s quake. Power Co, the operator of the Fukushima nuclear plant, reported no at its .

All but two of Japan’s 50 nuclear reactors have been idled since the Fukushima disaster as the government reviews safety.

The quake measured a “lower 5″ in Miyagi prefecture on Japan’s scale of one to seven, meaning there might be some damage to roads and houses that are less quake resistant.

The scale measures the amount of shaking and in that sense gives a better idea of possible damage than the magnitude. The quake registered a 4 in Tokyo.

The one-meter tsunami hit at Ishinomaki, in Miyagi, at the centre of the devastation from the March 2011 disaster. All Miyagi trains halted operations and Sendai airport, which was flooded by the tsunami last year, closed its runway.

Five people in the prefecture were slightly injured.

“I was in the centre of the city the very moment the earthquake struck. I immediately jumped into the car and started running away towards the mountains. I’m still hiding inside the car,” said Ishinomaki resident Chikako Iwai.

“…I have the radio on and they say the cars are still stuck in the traffic. I’m planning to stay here for the next couple of hours.”

Narita airport outside Tokyo was back in action after a brief closure for safety checks. There were small tsunamis, measuring in the centimeters, elsewhere near the .

Last year’s quake, which measured 9.0, triggered fuel-rod meltdowns at Fukushima, causing radiation leakage, contamination of food and water and mass evacuations. Much of the area is still deserted.

The government declared in December that the disaster was under control.

“Citizens are now escaping to designated evacuation centers and moving to places on higher ground,” office worker Naoki Ara said in Soma, 30 km (18 miles) from the Fukushima-Daiichi plant.

Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda cancelled campaigning in Tokyo ahead of a December 16 election and was on his way back to his office, but there was no immediate plan to hold a special cabinet meeting.

Public spending on quake-proofing buildings is a big election issue.

Japanese were posting photos of their TV screens with tsunami warnings on Facebook, asking each other whether they’re safe, confirming their whereabouts.

“It shook for a long time here in Tokyo, are you guys all right?” posted Eriko Hamada, enquiring about the safety of her friends.

Phone lines were overloaded and it was difficult to contact residents of Miyagi.

“Owing to the recent earthquake, phone lines are very busy, please try again later,” the phone operator said.

The yen rose against the dollar and the euro on the news, triggering some safe-haven inflows into the Japanese currency.

(Additional reporting by Tomasz Janowski, Leika Kihara and Aaron Sheldrick; Writing by Nick Macfie; Editing by Ken Wills)

Earthquake in northern Italy kills at least 10

11576dc0ead888cd606a36d66c657218 Earthquake in northern Italy kills at least 10

MILAN (AP) – A magnitude-5.8 earthquake hit on Tuesday, killing at least 10 people in the same region still struggling to recover from another fatal tremor on May 20.

Premier pledged in a hastily called news conference that the government will do “all that it must and all that is possible in the briefest period to guarantee the of normal life in this area that is so special, so important and so productive for Italy.”

The quake, which struck just after 9 a.m. local time (0700 GMT), was centered 25 miles northwest of the city of Bologna, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. It was just miles from where a magnitude-6.0 killed seven people earlier this month. The quake was felt from Piedmont in northwestern Italy to Venice in the northeast, and as far north as Austria.

PHOTOS: May 20 quake devastates Italian towns

The ANSA news agency reported that 10 people had died, while the LaPresse news agency said others were still buried under the of collapsed homes and factories. Concordia Mayor Carlo Marchini confirmed the death of one person struck by falling debris in the town’s historic center.

The mayor of San Felice sul Panaro told 24 that there were fatalities in his town. News media said a tower in the town had collapsed.

As far away as Milan, and schools were evacuated as a precaution before people were allowed to re-enter. Train lines connecting Bologna with other were stopped while authorities checked for any damage.

When the quake hit Tuesday, Monti was meeting with in Rome to discuss the impact of the earlier quake, which struck in the middle of the night and left at least 7,000 homeless.

Television footage on Sky News 24 showed evacuees from the May 20 quake peering out of their shaking emergency tents in disbelief. In the first quake, four of the victims were working overnight shifts in factories that collapsed; the other three died of heart conditions or other illnesses brought on by fear.

Residents had just been taking tentative steps toward resuming normal life when the second quake struck. In the town of Sant’Agostino, a daycare center had just reopened. In the town of Concordia, the mayor had scheduled a town meeting Tuesday evening to discuss the aftermath of the first quake.

The May 20 quake was described by Italian emergency officials as the worst to hit the region since the 1300s. In addition to the deaths, it knocked down a clock tower and other centuries-old buildings and caused millions in losses to a region known for making Parmesan cheese. Its was about 22 miles north of Bologna.

At least 7 dead after quake rocks northern Italy

4e99a5f2c5c9ad9c70ecb55a38e101ee At least 7 dead after quake rocks northern Italy

The 6.0- struck four (2.4 miles) outside Camposanto, northwest of Bologna.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

NEW: Seven people are dead following the earthquake, the civil protection agency says
At least 50 people are injured; workers are sifting through for survivors
The number of injuries is expected to rise as workers head toward remote villages
The USGS says a 6.0- earthquake struck

Rome () — A strong earthquake struck northern Italy early Sunday, leaving at least seven people dead, authorities said.

Two people were killed in a ceramic factory in Sant’Agostino di Ferrara, and one person died when a work shed collapsed in Ponte Rodoni di Bondeno, said Elisabetta Maffani, spokeswoman for Italy’s civil protection agency.

In addition, a woman in Bologna died of a during an evacuation; a national died when the factory he was working in collapsed; and a sixth victim was found dead under rubble in Sant’Agostino, Maffani said. The seventh was located under a collapsed house, according to Bellodi of the civil protection branch in Bologna.

At least 50 people were injured. Workers were searching through rubble for survivors in Sant’Agostino.

The 6.0-magnitude quake occurred just after 4 a.m. (10 p.m. ET Saturday), 4 kilometers (2.4 miles) outside Camposanto, northwest of Bologna, the U.S. Geological Survey said.

In Sant’Agostino, the quake knocked down a church bell.

Authorities were still assessing damage in the region, the civil protection office said. The agency said it anticipates reports of more injuries as rescue workers make their way to remote villages in the mountainous area.

In January, the same area was struck by a 5.3-magnitude quake.

In 2009, a 6.3- struck near the central Italian city of L’Aquila, killing more than 300 people and causing widespread destruction.

5.6-magnitude quake rattles Okla.

1778b5fc9737fe99cabde128769fdf2c 5.6 magnitude quake rattles Okla.

SPARKS, Okla. (AP) – Oklahomans more accustomed to than suffered through a weekend of temblors that cracked buildings, buckled a highway and rattled nerves. One jolting quake late Saturday was the state’s strongest ever and shook a college football stadium 50 miles away while another of lesser intensity struck before dawn Sunday.

“That shook up the place, had a lot of people nervous,” Justin said of the late Saturday quake, the strongest of a series of quakes that began hours earlier. “Yeah, it was pretty strong.”

A 5.6 earthquake Saturday night was centered near Sparks, 44 miles northeast of Oklahoma City, and could be felt as far away as Tennessee and Wisconsin, according to reports received by the U.S. Geological Survey. A 4.7 quake early Saturday was felt from Texas to Missouri.

The Survey said the latest quake hit at 3:39 a.m. Sunday, measuring 4.0 in magnitude and centered 36 miles east of Oklahoma City. Like Saturday night’s quake, it said, the quake Sunday took place a little more than 3 miles underground.

There were no immediate reports of serious injuries or major damage from the quakes or many small , but a number of homeowners and businesses reported cracked walls or fallen knickknacks. At Shawnee, the fire department said one spire on the administration building at St. Gregory University had been damaged and another one was leaning, according to KWTV in Oklahoma City.

“Earthquake damage in Oklahoma. That’s an anomaly right there,” Todd McKinsey of Moore told The Oklahoman newspaper after a magnitude 5.6 temblor centered 50 miles away left him with cracked drywall.

Oklahoma typically has about 50 earthquakes a year, and 57 tornadoes, but a swarm of quakes east of Oklahoma City contributed to a sharp increase in the number of temblors. Researchers said 1,047 quakes occurred last year, prompting them to install seismographs in the area. A cause of the wasn’t known.

Saturday night’s earthquake jolted Oklahoma State University’s stadium shortly after the No. 3 Cowboys defeated No. 17 Kansas State. The crowd of 58,895 was still leaving when it hit, and players were in the locker rooms beneath the stands at Boone Pickens Stadium.

The temblor seemed to last the better part of a minute, rippling upward to the stadium press box.

“Everybody was looking around and no one had any idea,” Oklahoma State quarterback Brandon Weeden said. “We thought the people above us were doing something. I’ve never felt one, so that was a first.”

An emergency manager in Lincoln County near the said U.S. 62, a two-lane highway that meanders through the gently rolling landscape between Oklahoma City and the Arkansas state line, crumbled in places when the stronger quake struck Saturday night. Other reports in the early hours Sunday were sketchy and mentioned cracks in some buildings and a chimney toppled.

The magnitude 4.7 earthquake that struck the area early Saturday — and a number of aftershocks following both large quakes — rattled homes and businesses, but said no injuries were reported and that there had been no immediate reports of major damages.

“Nothing is destroyed or anything like that,” Prague City Police Department dispatcher Claudie Morton told the Tulsa World after the Saturday morning quakes.

But authorities said they would need to await daybreak for better light to assess any damages from the later, more powerful quake.

The late-night quake was slightly less in intensity than a temblor that rattled the East Coast on Aug. 23. That 5.8 magnitude earthquake was centered in Virginia and was felt from Georgia to Canada. No major damage was reported, although cracks appeared in the Washington Monument, the National Cathedral suffered costly damage to sculpted stonework, and a number of federal buildings were evacuated.

If the 5.6 magnitude from Saturday’s late quake is confirmed, it would be Oklahoma’s strongest. USGS records show that a 5.5 magnitude earthquake struck El Reno, just west of Oklahoma City, in 1952 and, before Oklahoma became a state in 1907, a quake of similar magnitude 5.5 struck in northeastern Indian Territory in 1882.

“Oh, man. I’ve never felt anything like that in my life,” Morton told the Tulsa newspaper. “It was the scariest thing. I had a police officer just come in and sit down and all the sudden the walls started shaking and the windows were rattling. It felt like the roof was going to come off the police department.”

Morton said the office was flooded with calls, but no one reported any severe injuries or damage. She said residents told her that picture frames and mirrors fell from walls and broke, drawers worked loose from dressers and objects tumbled out of cabinets.

“We do have several damaged buildings downtown, but it’s just cracks and things like that,” Morton said.

Oklahoma Geological Survey researcher Austin Holland told Oklahoma City television station KOTV that the earthquake and aftershocks occurred on a known fault line.

Residents in Prague and Sparks felt an intense shaking, but for those farther away the quake was more of a dull rumble, he said.

“It shakes much more rapidly when you’re closer to it,” he said. “Because it’s a large earthquake, it’s going to rumble for a while.”

Major quake rocks Alaska

ad03b705ed683b81b4a64a8ab4897a33 Major quake rocks Alaska

( News / ) – An major earthquake with a of 7.1 has rocked portions of Alaska, the U.S. Geological Survey reports. The U.S. Geological Service has issued a for Alaska’s Aleutian Islands.

Updated at 8:15: that a woman who answered the phone at the city hall in Unalaska but declined to give her name said people at Dutch Harbor were awakened by sirens. “We have some people on high ground, but not a lot,” she said. “Sirens woke us all up — everybody’s moving.”

Updated at 8:07: that the shallow depth of the quake — 6.2 miles — would make it capable of causing damage. It struck, however, in a sparsely populated part of the Aleutian Islands, the Geological Survey said.

Updated at 7:55 a.m.: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is urging all within the tsunami warning area to move inland to higher ground and away from all harbours and inlets, including those directly sheltered from the sea.

People who felt the earth shake may see unusual wave action or may see the water level rising or receding. If so, they may have only a few minutes before the arrival of a tsunami, NOAA warned.

Original post: The says the earthquake struck in the waters southeast of Atka, Alaska, in the north-Pacific island chain at about 6:55 a.m. ET, and there are no initial reports of injuries or damage, reports.

The tsunami warning is in effect for coastal areas of Alaska from Unimak Pass to Amchitka Pass. The areas are very remote and not heavily populated, according to Jessica Sigala, geophysicist with the USGS in Golden, Colo.

The said it did not see a threat of a Pacific-wide destructive tsunami from the quake.

Japan expands nuclear evacuation zone as new quake hits

b3d66e20ca314afa35b16b54d5aed7e7 Japan expands nuclear evacuation zone as new quake hits

() – Japan on Monday expanded the around its crippled nuclear plant because of high levels of accumulated radiation, as a strong aftershock rattled the area one month after a quake and tsunami sparked the worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl.

A 7.1 tremor shook buildings in Tokyo and a wide of on Monday evening, triggering a small tsunami alert. NHK said it caused the off-site power supply for two damaged reactors to shut down.

The U.S. Geological Survey said the aftershock struck 38 km (24 miles) west of the city of Iwaki, at a depth of 13 km (8 miles).

Tokyo Electric Power Co (), which operates the plant, said workers had stopped pouring cooling water on reactors No. 1, No. 2 and No. 3 at .

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano said villages and towns outside the 20 km (12 mile) evacuation zone that have had more accumulated radiation would be evacuated. Children, pregnant women, and hospitalized patients should stay out of some areas 20-30 km from the Fukushima nuclear complex, he added.

The decision to widen the evacuation band around the Fukushima plant was “based on data analysis of accumulated radiation exposure information”, Edano told a news conference.

“These new evacuation plans are meant to ensure safety against risks of living there for half a year or one year,” he said. There was no need to evacuate immediately, he added.

Japan had resisted extending the zone despite over radiation spreading from the six damaged reactors at Fukushima, which engineers are still struggling to bring under control after they were wrecked by the 15-meter tsunami.

Residents of one village, Iitate, which is 40 km from the Fukushima Daiichi plant, have been told to prepare for evacuation because of prolonged exposure to radiation, a local official told Reuters by phone. It has a population of 5,000.

The Agency has urged Japan to extend the zone and some countries, including the United States, have advised their citizens to stay 80 km away from the plant.

TEPCO President Masataka Shimizu visited the area on Monday for the first time the March 11 disaster. He had all but vanished from public view apart from a brief apology shortly after the crisis began and has spent some of the time since in hospital.

“I would like to deeply apologize again for causing physical and psychological hardships to people of Fukushima prefecture and near the nuclear plant,” said a grim-faced Shimizu.

Dressed in a blue work jacket, he bowed his head for a moment of silence with other TEPCO officials at 2:46 p.m. (0546 GMT), exactly a month after the earthquake hit.

Fukushima Governor Yuhei Sato refused to meet Shimizu during his visit, but the TEPCO boss left a business card at the government office.

Sato has criticized the evacuation policy, saying residents in a 20-30 km radius were initially told to stay indoors and then advised to evacuate voluntarily.

RADIOACTIVE WATER

Engineers at the damaged Daiichi plant north of Tokyo said they were no closer to restoring the plant’s cooling system which is critical if overheated fuel rods are to be cooled and the six reactors brought under control.

In a desperate move to cool highly radioactive fuel rods, operator Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO) has pumped water onto reactors, some of which have experienced partial meltdown.

But the strategy has hindered moves to restore the plant’s internal cooling system, critical to end the crisis, as engineers have had to focus how to store 60,000 tons of contaminated water.

Engineers have been forced to pump low-level radioactive water, left by the tsunami, back into the sea in order to free up storage capacity for highly contaminated water from reactors.

China and South Korea have both criticized Japan for pumping radioactive water into the sea, with Seoul calling it incompetent, reflecting growing international unease over the month-long atomic disaster and the spread of radiation.

TEPCO hopes to stop pumping radioactive water into the ocean on Monday, days later than planned.

Engineers are also pumping nitrogen into reactors to counter a build-up of hydrogen and prevent another explosion sending more radiation into the air, but they say the risk of such a dramatic event has lowered significantly since March 11.

POLITICAL FALLOUT

The triple disaster is the worst to hit Japan since World War Two after a 9.0 and a huge tsunami battered its northeast coast, leaving nearly 28,000 dead or missing and rocking the world’s third-largest economy.

Concern at Japan’s inability contain its nuclear crisis is mounting with Prime Minister Kan’s ruling party suffering embarrassing losses in local elections on Sunday.

Voters vented their anger at the government’s handling of the nuclear and humanitarian crisis, with Kan’s ruling Democratic Party of Japan losing nearly 70 seats in local elections.

The unpopular Kan was already under pressure to step down before March 11, but analysts say he is unlikely to be forced out during the crisis, set to drag on for months.

“The great disaster was a double tragedy for Japan. The first tragedy was the catastrophe caused by the earthquake, tsunami and the nuclear accident. The other misfortune was that the disaster resulted in prolonging Prime Minister Kan’s time in office,” Sankei newspaper said in an editorial on Monday.

($1=85.475 Japanese yen)

(Additional reporting by Issei Kato, Shinichi Saoshiro, Chisa Fujioka, Elaine Lies, Masahiro Koike and Linda Sieg in Tokyo; Writing by Michael Perry; Editing by Jonathan Thatcher and Alex Richardson)

Magnitude 6.6-quake jolts Japan coast

54a4167fb026962bc6dc9699f9eb5525 Magnitude 6.6 quake jolts Japan coast

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

* of quake is lowered from 7.1 to 6.6
* Quake generates in northeastern Japan
* A is issued for several prefectures
* Workers at the Daiichi plant are asked to evacuate

RELATED TOPICS

* 2011 Japan Disaster
*
* Fukushima Daiichi

() — Fires burned in northeastern Japan Monday evening after a powerful earthquake rattled the region, sending a landslide into Iwaki City, authorities said.

A preliminary estimate put the quake’s magnitude at 7.1, which was later lowered to 6.6, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. A series of smaller quakes continued to shake the region. Residents in Tokyo also felt the jolts.

A tsunami warning issued by Japan’s Meteorological Agency was later canceled.

Monday’s initial quake was centered about 164 kilometers (101 miles) northeast of Tokyo, or about 50 kilometers (31 miles) southwest of the crippled Fukushima Daiichi .

Workers at the plant were asked to evacuate for a time, but later returned to resume their efforts to cool the troubled nuclear facility.

The Tohoku Electric Power Company said 220,000 households and businesses in Fukushima were without power after Monday’s quake, which came a month after a deadly magnitude-9 quake and tsunami devastated the .