Japan (AP) — Cooling systems have failed in three nuclear reactors at the same plant along Japan's northeast coast, following Friday's powerful earthquake and tsunami.

Authorities have evacuated some 210,000 people within 12 miles of the plant (Fukushima Dai-ichi), located 170 miles northeast of Tokyo.
The first nuclear crisis happened when the building housing one reactor exploded Saturday. The Japanese government says radiation emanated from the plant, and at one point, the plant was releasing each hour the amount of radiation a person normally absorbs from the environment each year.
The reactor itself remained intact, and officials pumped seawater into it to try to avoid disaster.
Then, the cooling systems malfunctioned at two other reactor units. The government says workers tried to ease the pressure from the third problem unit by releasing steam that likely contained small amounts of radiation.
© 2011 Associated Press
[These events offer incontrovertible PROOF that nuclear reactors are extremely unstable and unsafe; notwithstanding their ability to poison the environment for thousands of years.
But the CORPORATISTS and FINANCIAL elites, who have taken control of ALL Western 'democracies,' make PROFITS from the electricity generated by these highly unsafe plants. Until the people exercise their democratic RIGHT and RESTORE REPRESENTATIVE GOVERNMENT, the masses will just have to 'lump it' -- while they glow in the dark. WHAT DOES IT TAKE, PEOPLE?????
The Japanese government is offering 'iodine tablets' to citizens exposed to radiation from the runaway reactors -- perhaps they should also distribute 'paper crucifixes' -- give us and the Japanese people a break!]

Radiation up 400 times in Miyagi, new blast feared at Fukushima
http://tinyurl.com/475jurg
by staff report via quin 2011-03-13 07:37:19
A STATE of emergency has been declared at a Japanese nuclear facility at Onagawa after excessive radiation levels were recorded there following Friday's earthquake, the UN atomic watchdog.
The news came as the country was already battling a feared meltdown of two reactors at the ageing Fukushima atomic plant.
An explosion at the Fukushima atomic plant blew apart the building housing its No 1 reactor on Saturday, a day after the biggest quake ever recorded in Japan unleashed a monster 10m tsunami.
The atomic emergency widened yesterday as the cooling systems vital for preventing overheating failed at a second reactor, and the government warned there was a risk it too could be hit with a blast.
"There is the possibility of an explosion in the No 3 reactor," said Yukio Edano, the top government spokesman, while voicing confidence it would withstand the blast as the number-one reactor had the day before.
Mr Edano, the chief cabinet secretary, said earlier it was highly likely a meltdown had occurred in the first reactor, at the plant situated on the coast 250km north-east of Tokyo.
"As for the No 3 reactor, we are acting on the assumption that it is possible," he said.
© 2011 News Limited
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