ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

Sexual Violence in Haiti’s Camps

Alarming Levels of Sexual Violence in Haiti’s Camps for Displaced People

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Alarming Levels of Sexual Violence in Haiti’s Camps for Displaced People

CHRGJ Survey Suggests Alarming Levels of Sexual Violence in Haiti’s IDP Camps

Preliminary Results Substantiate Calls for Immediate Preventive Measures

(New York) March 16, 2011 — An alarmingly high proportion of households surveyed in Haiti’s camps for the internally displaced (IDP) have been victimized by sexual violence since the earthquake, said the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice (CHRGJ) in a briefing paper <http://www.chrgj.org/projects/docs/Haiti%20Sexual%20Violence%20March%202011.pdf>  released today.

The Center—based at NYU School of Law—released the paper just days before Haitians are set to return to the polls to vote in a Presidential run-off.  The paper makes public the preliminary findings of its survey on gender-based violence and access to food and water, conducted in January 2011 in several IDP camps in Port-au-Prince. The findings add weight to what human rights groups and victims groups have been saying for several months now: that sexual violence and the fear of sexual violence are common in the camps and that significant changes in security and access to basic resources are required.

“Since the earthquake, women’s groups have been receiving daily reports of sexual assault occurring while women engage in ordinary activities, such as walking to gather water or washing in the morning,” said Margaret Satterthwaite, a Faculty Director at CHRGJ and the Principal Investigator for the survey. “The results of this survey amplify these reports through empirical data and suggest that immediate action is needed to prevent further assaults.”

Close to a million people continue to live in tents or makeshift shelters in IDP camps throughout earthquake-affected zones of the country, the majority concentrated in the densely populated capital city of Port-au-Prince. In January 2011, CHRGJ—along with its Global Justice Clinic—conducted a survey of 365 households in four IDP camps in Port-au-Prince. The survey is one component of a larger CHRGJ study assessing the links between gender-based violence and access to food and water. The project responds to community organizations’ concern with increasing sexual violence in the post-earthquake camps.

The survey’s most significant results are as follows:

§  High levels of sexual violence: 14% of respondents surveyed reported that one or more members of their household had been victimized by rape or other forms of sexual assault, or both, since the earthquake. 9% of households reported that one or more members had experienced rape or forced sex since the earthquake and 8% reported experiencing other forms of unwanted touching or harassment. These prevalence rates are appreciably higher than other post-earthquake data.

§  Notable levels of sexual violence against boys and men: Although the majority of victims of sexual violence whose gender was reported were women and girls (86%), a notable number of boys and men (14%) were also reported to be victims. The youngest victim documented by the survey was a four year-old boy.

§  High levels of fear about sexual violence: Almost 60% of respondents said they were afraid of sexual violence against themselves or members of their household in the preceding month. There was very little difference between male and female respondents on this question. 70% of the respondents reported being more worried about sexual violence after the earthquake than before.

§  High levels of food insecurity: Responses to questions aimed at assessing levels of hunger suggest alarmingly high levels of food insecurity, with a large proportion of respondents indicating that they had gone at least one full day in the past week without a meal.  Preliminary analysis also suggests there may be a correlation between levels of hunger and sexual violence. Survey respondents who reported having experienced sexual violence were also notably less likely to report having eaten every day in the past week than respondents who were not victims of sexual violence.

§  Perceived Increases in “transactional” or “survival” sex: Early results show a high degree of agreement about the prevalence of so-called “transactional” or “survival” sex since the earthquake, with much concern about young women and girls, in particular, adopting the survival strategy of trading sex for basic access to resources.

Although the results cannot be generalized to the whole IDP population, they suggest that many IDPs, especially women and girls, are experiencing sexual violence. The vast majority of people in the camps live in overcrowded temporary shelters or in tents, most of which lack locks and are made of material that is easily penetrated. The camps’ designated bathing areas and latrine facilities often lack lighting, locks, or adequate privacy and the walk to collect drinking water or to the market to obtain food is often treacherous.

CHRGJ believes it is imperative that international organizations and the Haitian government act to address this situation immediately. Concrete and proven measures to protect against sexual violence must be implemented in the camps and the community as soon as possible to prevent further assaults and alleviate the current climate of fear within camps. Led by community-based organizations, simple interim solutions to preventing attacks and reducing vulnerability should be immediately implemented as longer term solutions are being worked out, and both should be a matter of priority for the international community, international NGOs, and the government of Haiti. The international community should expedite funding for such measures and offer technical assistance where necessary.

“How much proof do we need before real change is made?” said Ellie Happel, a student in the Global Justice Clinic at NYU Law, who traveled to Haiti as part of the survey team. “Although we’re pleased that our survey can corroborate what’s been said by Haitians for months, it’s also time to move beyond debates about numbers to concrete action aimed at protecting these populations from sexual violence.”

CHRGJ will release a full report on the situation in the summer of 2011, following additional work in Haiti to conduct focus groups and key informant interviews. In the meantime, it is publishing this briefing paper to help inform immediate steps to remedy this urgent situation.

CHRGJ and its partners have also released reports on the right to water <http://www.chrgj.org/projects/docs/wochnansoley.pdf>  and the right to food <http://www.chrgj.org/projects/docs/sakvidpakanpe.pdf>  in Haiti.

About the CHRGJ

The Center for Human Rights and Global Justice (CHRGJ) at New York University School of Law was established in 2002 to bring together the law school’s teaching, research, clinical, internship, and publishing activities around issues of international human rights law.   The Center has been working on economic, social and cultural rights in Haiti since 2003, producing several reports on the right to food and water, as well as campaigning for transparency and donor accountability. To read more about the Center’s work in Haiti, see our website at www.chrgj.org <http://www.chrgj.org>
About the Global Justice Clinic

The Global Justice Clinic (GJC), taught by Professor Margaret Satterthwaite and Adjunct Professor Jayne Huckerby, explores how human rights law can be brought to bear on situations of global injustice.  Working on cases and projects that involve cross-border human rights violations, the deleterious impacts of extraterritorial activities by state and non-state actors, and emerging problems that require close collaboration between actors at the local and international levels, students engage in human rights advocacy in domestic and international settings. Fall 2010 and Spring 2011 GJC students have been instrumental to all aspects of CHRGJ’s current work in Haiti.
Contact:

Veerle Opgenhaffen

Senior Program Director, CHRGJ

opgenhaffen@exchange.law.nyu.edu

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Cancer – Vatican Radio To Blame

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Well yes says the supreme court of Italy. For all of you Catholic readers, calm down, as far as I know the Pope is just fine. It is not like he calls me everyday to say hi, and I am still waiting for a ride in the Pope Mobile, but for the most part the Pope and I get along just fine, and he is great health.

Of course we do have our spats, we don’t see eye to eye on contraception, and he gets a little surly when you bring up the subject of gay marriage. Rumor has it that he so incensed that he no longer watches the Ellen DeGeneres program (and I know that was one of his favorites).

So what is the scoop on cancer?

Well, the supreme court of Italy has ruled against Vatican City for their radio service. Apparently the papal transmitters are so powerful that health problems abound, on the Dr. Mercola site:

Reports emerged in 2001 that electromagnetic radiation produced by Vatican Radio’s transmitters near the town was above the legal limit. A health authority released a study claiming that children in the area were six times more likely to develop leukemia.

The town in question is Cesano, a small town close to Rome.

The exact amount of damages that the Vatican will have to pay have not been disclosed. But I am sure that it will not put a dent in the ‘war chest’.

Does EMF represent a danger? As with many subjects, that question will be answered over time. It is unfortunate that we live in a world where health studies have moved from the controlled laboratory environment, into the real world.

The Mercola site had this delightful quote:

Vatican Radio said it was disappointed by the ruling

I will bet they were! When science meets religion it is not unusual for a bit of a rumble! This case is obviously the poster child for the modern world. One has to wonder what the next step might be? Declaring the Earth the center of the universe? Oops that card was already played once before, and it wasn’t a trump.

Although this will not be the major news item on the next Surviving The 21st Century broadcast, I am certain that it will get a mention.

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Calls For List Of Priests Who Abuse Kids

SNAP Calls For List Of Jesuit Priests Who Sexually Abused Kids

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SNAP Calls For List Of Jesuit Priests Who Sexually Abused Kids

Request Comes After Former MUHS Teacher Was Permanently Removed From Ministry

MILWAUKEE -- There is a new call for the Wisconsin Province of the Society of Jesus to release a list of all Jesuit priests who sexually abused children.

The Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, delivered a letter to the headquarters of the Jesuit order in Milwaukee on Thursday afternoon.

SNAP is asking the Jesuits to create a public registry of all priests with confirmed reports of abusing children.

The request comes after a former Marquette University High School teacher was permanently removed from the ministry.

The Rev. Perry Robinson worked at MUHS in the 1980s. He was reassigned to a parish in Nebraska after an investigation involving nude photos of students.

Last month, the archbishop of Omaha removed Robinson from the ministry after receiving a new report of abuse from a former MUHS student.

SNAP is also requesting that all records and evidence of sex crimes by priests be turned over to law enforcement.

"I think it's imperative, especially in light of (the Archdiocese of) Milwaukee going through bankruptcy right now, that Archbishop Listecki call on the Jesuit superiors in the city to be transparent and to be forthright with issues of sexual abuse," said John Pilmaier, SNAP Wisconsin's coordinator.

The Wisconsin Province of the Society of Jesus released a statement Thursday saying in part, "The Wisconsin Province is dedicated to providing and maintaining safe environments in ministry of all and holds itself accountable to the highest standards of ethics in ministry not only with minors, but with all those with whom it works and ministers. The Wisconsin Province receives allegations of abuse openly and compassionately and stands ready to help victims of abuse."
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ScienceCasts: Super Moon

Glenn Beck: Quake a Message from God

Glenn Beck Says Japan Quake a Message from God

Amplify’d from www.christianpost.com

Glenn Beck Says Japan Quake a Message from God

By Wesley Ernst|Christian Post Correspondent

Talk show host Glenn Beck has called Japan’s latest deadly earthquake a message from God.

His remarks come after a tsunami caused by a magnitude-8.9 earthquake hit the Japanese coastline last Friday, claiming an estimated 10,000 lives. Since the quake occured, several nuclear power plants risk meltdown after receiving damage.

"I'm not saying God is, you know, causing earthquakes – well I'm not not saying that either!" Beck said on television Monday.

"What God does is God's business, I have no idea. But I'll tell you this – whether you call it Gaia or whether you call it Jesus, there's a message being sent.”

The controversial political commentator later suggested the Ten Commandments as a solution to current global woes.

Despite having an open Mormon faith, Beck has made friendly gestures to U.S. Christians in the past years that included a private visit with evangelist Billy Graham in late February.

Not all major Christian groups find Beck to be appealing, however.

In a televised broadcast last March, Beck angered anti-poverty Christians by asking believers to leave churches propagating social justice. He later linked social justice with communism and Nazism.

The Rev. Jim Wallis, CEO of the social justice ministry Sojourners, subsequently called for a boycott of Beck’s radio and television shows.

Last Friday, the online community Faith America – which claims over 100,000 in membership – asked two radio stations belonging to faith-based Salem Communications to “give up Glenn Beck for Lent.”

Beck is not the first personality caught making remarks that have offended the sensitivity of television viewers worldwide in the aftermath of the disaster.

In Japan, Tokyo Governor Shintaro Ishihara was criticized for telling reporters on Monday that the tsunami was needed “to wipe out egoism, which has rusted onto the mentality of Japanese over a long period of time.”

“I think [the disaster] is tembatsu [divine punishment], although I feel sorry for disaster victims,” he said.

Shintaro later rescinded his comments and apologized in a press conference on Tuesday.

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Tokyo Governor: Tsunami is Punishment

Tokyo Governor Apologizes for Saying Tsunami is Punishment

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Tokyo Governor Apologizes for Saying Tsunami is Punishment

By Wesley Ernst|Christian Post Correspondent

Tokyo Governor Shintaro Ishihara apologized Tuesday for saying the tsunami that recently struck Japan is divine punishment for the country’s egoism.

Shintaro told reporters during a press conference that he takes back the comments he made Monday and offered “a deep apology,” according to Japan’s Kyodo News.

He had originally said the tsunami was needed “to wipe out egoism, which has rusted onto the mentality of Japanese over a long period of time.”

“I think [the disaster] is tembatsu (divine punishment), although I feel sorry for disaster victims,” he had said.

Last Friday, gigantic waves generated by an undersea tremor leveled entire coastal cities and towns, leaving an estimated 10,000 people dead or missing.

The earthquake is reportedly the fifth most powerful quake to hit the world since 1900 and the worst in Japan's recorded history.

Just a day before Shintaro made his controversial remark, the Rev. David Yonggi Cho, senior pastor of the Yoido Full Gospel Church – the world’s largest church – also came under fire for calling the recent Japanese quake and tsunami “God’s warning” in a Sunday interview published in an online newspaper.

“Japan sees a lot of earthquakes, and I think it is regrettable that there has been such an enormous loss of property and life due to the earthquake,” Cho had said in the News Mission interview.

“Because the Japanese people shun God in terms of their faith and follow idol worship, atheism, and materialism, it makes me wonder if this was not God’s warning to them.”

There are only around 2 million Christians in Japan out of a population of 127.5 million.

The South Korean minister added that he hoped the “catastrophe can be turned into a blessing” and that the Japanese would “take this opportunity to return to the Lord.”

In postings made in online social networks, Cho was blasted by his own countrymen.

Jing Joong-gwon, an influential social critic in Korea, called Cho a “lunatic” via Twitter. “While pastor speak nonsense, true Christian virtues are taking place outside of the church,” he added, in reference to the international community’s relief work in Japan.

Later, News Mission withdrew its interview with Cho.

The Yoido Full Gospel Church in South Korea is regarded as having the largest congregation in the world, boasting a membership of at least one million people based on reports in 2007. The church was founded in 1958 by Rev. Cho, who continues to serve as its senior pastor.

In America, no prominent Christian leaders have come out to say that Japan’s disaster is due to divine punishment. But last year, controversial televangelist Pat Robertson outraged prominent evangelical leaders by calling the earthquake in Haiti a curse because of the country’s alleged historic ties to voodooism.

Read more at www.christianpost.com
 

Christian Message to Kacey Jordan

Christian Ex-Porn Star's Message to Kacey Jordan

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Christian Ex-Porn Star's Message to Kacey Jordan

By Josephine Vivaldo|Christian Post Contributor

An ex-porn star has a message for adult film star Kacey Jordan, who was tied to Charlie Sheen for her sexual services early this year. Jordan allegedly tried to kill herself on Monday.

Shelley Lubben
Shelley Lubben is a former porn star who now heads a non-profit organization called Pink Cross Foundation.

Although some reports indicated that Jordan’s suicidal messages on Twitter were only a publicity stunt, Shelley Lubben is certain that she’s not only trying to get people’s attention but also desperately asking for help.

One of tweets reads: “i took a bunch of pills...drank a hotel size bottle of jack... stumbled to the bathroom to weigh myself.........86 lbs.”

She also tweeted: “i've over done it... the more i do...i keep passing out... i just pray i wake up each time.”

Regarding the tweets, Lubben told The Christian Post, “She’s online all the time crying out for help. We need to help her, we need to get her out of that situation and get her to a safe place. “

When the Chicago police arrived at Jordan’s hotel room on Monday, they found her with prescription pill bottles, broken glass and alcohol. They also found cuts and scrapes on her wrists and arms. To Lubben, none of this is surprising.

The ex-porn star sincerely wants Jordan to be aware that she “has been put in the Hollywood scene because she's connected to Charlie Sheen, she had an abortion just recently, she's traumatized, [and] she needs help.”

During Sheen’s cocaine bust in January, Jordan was reported to have had a brief sexual encounter with the actor. She found him to be “the most self-destructive person I have ever met," according to an interview with GQ.

She recently tweeted about Sheen, “those 16 hours i was with charlie sheen... messed me up... i can't get that image out of my head... i think i keep trying to feel his pain.”

As a woman who has seen porn industry firsthand, Lubben wants to help the 22-year-old. But she’s urging the public to first, cease contributing to the porn industry by watching porn and second, stop thinking that porn is a glamorous world as most make it seem.

As an ex-porn star, she knows the trauma that results from working in the industry.

“I was diagnosed with bipolar disorder, I was really sick, mentally and emotionally from my time in the porn industry. All the porn stars are like this,” she told CP.

She added, “The porn industry tries to hide [it].”

“It's common for porn stars to get abortions, it's very common for them to have stress disorder,” she explained. “And I know because not only was I there, but now I have a non-profit organization called Pink Cross Foundation that helps women and men out of porn who had substance abuse problems or some kind of mental disorder.”

Her advice for Jordan is to remove herself from everything and everyone tied to the industry; go to a detox center where she can be cleaned from all the alcohol and drugs she’s been taking; and then seek a trauma therapist and learn coping skills from ex-porn stars.

“She just had an abortion so her female hormones are all crazy right now. She needs to be taken out of the environment very quickly and be put into safety where a professional needs to reach out to her,” Lubben urged.

“People like Kacey Jordan come in and out all the time and some of them commit suicide. She's lucky to be alive.”

Lubben, a follower of Christ, has worked on years of research trying to bring down the porn industry from the pedestal.

According to her book, The Truth Behind the Fantasy of Porn, she notes that a porn star dies every month and that porn should be considered sex trafficking due to the high demand and requests for the porn stars.

“I hope people in the porn industry will start listening to the voice of reason and the voice of truth,” she told CP.

In her own testimony, she said, “Jesus Christ gets all the glory. I wouldn't be alive if he didn't saved me. We need to be praying for them, we need to reach out to them.”

Read more at www.christianpost.com
 

Emperor Akihito Praying; Deeply Worried

Emperor Akihito Praying; Deeply Worried over Japan Nuclear Crisis

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Emperor Akihito Praying; Deeply Worried over Japan Nuclear Crisis

By Ethan Cole|Christian Post Reporter

Japan’s Emperor Akihito on Wednesday expressed deep concern over the nation’s escalating nuclear crisis and said he was praying for the safety of people.

japan earthquake nuclear
(Photo: AP/The Yomiuri Shimbun, Koichi Nakamura)
Evacuees watch news on a troubled nuclear power plant on television at a makeshift shelter in Fukushima, northern Japan, Tuesday, March 15, 2011, four days after a powerful earthquake-triggered tsunami hit the country's east coast.

It was the first time in the history of Japan that the emperor addressed his nation on television during a crisis, according to the country’s Imperial Household Agency. Akihito, 77, told the public that he was “deeply worried” about the nuclear crisis, which escalated to the point that plant workers had to be temporarily evacuated on Wednesday.

“The number of people killed is increasing day by day and we do not know how many people have fallen victim,” Akihito said.

“I pray for the safety of as many people as possible,” he said.

He also mentioned the severe conditions that survivors are living in – bitter cold and shortage of water and fuel – and said, “I cannot help praying that rescue work is done swiftly and people’s lives get better, even a little.”

By Wednesday afternoon, the official death toll had soared to 3,676 confirmed dead and 7,558 unaccounted for, according to the nation’s police agency. But authorities say it is likely that more than 10,000 people died in the 8.9-magnitude earthquake and tsunami disasters that struck the nation on March 11.

The United States Geological Survey recorded 54 aftershocks in Japan by midafternoon Wednesday. Four of the earthquakes had magnitudes greater than 6.0.

“I hope from the bottom of my heart that the people will, hand in hand, treat each other with compassion and overcome these difficult times,” Akihito said in the video message.

The emperor particularly highlighted the “unpredictable” situation at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant about 150 miles north of Tokyo. Another fire broke out at the facility early on Wednesday at reactor No. 4.

The situation at No. 4 is “not so good” and No. 3 is the “priority,” said a plant operator, according to Reuters.

Since the twin disasters on Friday, workers have been frantically trying to cool down the rods to avoid a potential nuclear meltdown.

On Tuesday, authorities reduced the 750 workers at the power plant down to 50. And all of the remaining workers were temporarily evacuated Wednesday because the radiation levels were dangerously high.

In the video message, the emperor thanked domestic and international rescue workers who are responding to the disaster.

Among the relief groups responding to the disaster is the Baptist Global Response team of the Southern Baptist Convention. The team arrived in Tokyo on March 12 but said the nuclear threat is complicating their relief efforts.

“When most disasters occur, a single event is normally accompanied by a fairly set list of accompanying effects. Floods will leave mud, destroy crops, damage homes, contaminate water supplies, and cause sicknesses,” explained Pat Melancon, BGR disaster management specialist, on Tuesday. “When earthquakes occur, you see some of the same results, with additional problems like interrupted transportation, widespread structural damage or destruction, and the like.

“The Japan event, however, is different. Here we have three catastrophic events: the earthquake, which did much damage in areas not being featured in the news; the tsunami, which hit the low coastal areas of Japan especially hard; and now an additional unfolding event – the demise of nuclear power plants.”

Melancon said the Japan disaster “is unlike any other in recent history.”

An estimated 850,000 households in northern Japan still do not have electricity despite freezing temperatures, said Tohuku Electric power Co. according to Reuters. And the government said 1.5 million households or more do not have running water.

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Fast Facts about Radiation

Fast Facts about Radiation from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Reactors

Fast Facts about Radiation from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Reactors

Elevated radiation levels have been detected at and around the stricken nuclear power station in Japan, but the Chernobyl accident remains far more catastrophic

Radiation symbol
Image: WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
Since a magnitude 9.0 earthquake rocked Japan and set loose a massive tsunami March 11, the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) has been scrambling to avert a nuclear disaster at its hardest hit plant. The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station, home to six nuclear reactors, has witnessed explosions at three reactors and a fire in a spent-fuel pool at a fourth. At two reactors, units No. 2 and 3, the vessels containing the nuclear material are suspected to be compromised.



A handful of plant workers remain on the site, implementing emergency cooling measures at the stricken, overheating reactors. Radiation levels have fluctuated wildly during the crisis, and the extent to which the workers' health has been endangered may not become apparent for years. But so far, the releases of radiation have been limited compared to the 1986 Chernobyl disaster, an explosive event that caused dozens of cases of fatal radiation poisoning among plant workers and that has been implicated in thousands of thyroid cancer diagnoses in the years that followed. (Nuclear fission of uranium fuel produces radioactive iodine, which gathers in the thyroid gland.) As many nuclear experts have noted, the Fukushima Daiichi reactors are better designed than the Chernobyl reactor that failed.



Below are some facts and figures about the radiation hazard of the Fukushima Daiichi plant and how it compares to other nuclear accidents in history. Many of the figures are measured in millisieverts, an international unit of radiation dosage. One sievert is equal to 100 rems, so one millisievert is 0.1 rem.



Radiation dose at the boundary of the Fukushima Daiichi plant at 2:30 P.M. Japan time on March 16: 1.9 millisieverts (mSv) per hour



Peak radiation dose measured inside Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station on March 15: 400 mSv per hour



Maximum allowable exposure for U.S. radiation workers: 50 mSv per year



Average exposure of U.S. residents from natural and man-made radiation sources: 6.2 mSv per year



Estimated total exposure at the boundary of the Three Mile Island site during the 1979 accident there: 1 mSv or less



Average total radiation dose to the 114,500 individuals evacuated during the 1986 Chernobyl disaster: 31 mSv



Half-life of iodine 131, a dangerous radioactive isotope released in nuclear accidents: 8 days



Half-life of cesium 137, another major radionuclide released in nuclear accidents: 30 years



Decay products of iodine 131 and cesium 137: gamma rays and beta particles (electrons or positrons)



Amount of nuclear fuel in the Chernobyl 4 reactor that exploded in 1986: 190 metric tons



Estimated nuclear fuel and fission by-products released into the atmosphere during Chernobyl disaster: 25 to 57 metric tons



Approximate amount of nuclear fuel in each crippled Fukushima Daiichi reactor: 70 to 100 metric tons



Sources: Japan Atomic Industrial Forum, International Atomic Energy Agency, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Nuclear Energy Institute
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What Happens During a Nuclear Meltdown?

What Happens During a Nuclear Meltdown?

Nuclear reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi station in Japan are critically endangered but have not reached full meltdown status. Our nuclear primer explains what that means and how the situation compares with past nuclear accidents

Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station
BEFORE THE QUAKE: The Fukushima Daiichi plant as it looked before the 2011 earthquake and tsunami.
Image: WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
How does a nuclear reactor work?

Most nuclear reactors, including those at Japan's Fukushima Daiichi generating station, are essentially high-tech kettles that efficiently boil water to produce electricity. They rely on harnessing nuclear fission—the splitting of an atom into two smaller atoms, which also yields heat and sends neutrons flying. If another atom absorbs one of those neutrons, the atom becomes unstable and undergoes fission itself, releasing more heat and more neutrons. The chain reaction becomes self-sustaining, producing a steady supply of heat to boil water, drive steam turbines and thereby generate electricity.



How much electricity does nuclear power provide in Japan and elsewhere?

With 54 nuclear reactors generating 280 billion kilowatt-hours annually, Japan is the world's third-largest producer of nuclear power, after the U.S. and France, according to data from the International Atomic Energy Agency. The Fukushima Daiichi station, which has been hit hard by the March 11 earthquake, houses six of those reactors, all of which came online in the 1970s.



Worldwide, nuclear energy accounts for about 15 percent of electricity generation; Japan gets nearly 30 percent of its electricity from its nuclear plants. The U.S. produces more nuclear power overall, but nuclear constitutes a smaller share of its energy portfolio. About 20 percent of U.S. electricity comes from nuclear power plants, making it the third-largest source of electricity in the country after coal (45 percent) and natural gas (23 percent).



What fuels a nuclear reactor?

Most nuclear reactors use uranium fuel that has been "enriched" in uranium 235, an isotope of uranium that fissions readily. (Isotopes are variants of elements with different atomic masses.) Uranium 238 is much more common in nature than uranium 235 but does not fission well, so fuel manufacturers boost the uranium 235 content to a few percent, which is enough to maintain a continuous fission reaction and generate electricity. Enriched uranium is manufactured into fuel rods that are encased in metal cladding made of alloys such as zirconium.



Reactor No. 3 at the Fukushima Daiichi station runs on so-called mixed oxide (MOX) fuel, in which uranium is mixed with other fissile materials such as plutonium from spent reactor fuel or from decommissioned nuclear weapons.



How do you turn off a nuclear reaction?

Sustained nuclear fission reactions rely on the passing of neutrons from one atom to another—the neutrons released in one atom's fissioning trigger the fissioning of the next atom. The way to cut off a fission chain reaction, then, is to intercept the neutrons. Nuclear reactors utilize control rods made from elements such as cadmium, boron or hafnium, all of which are efficient neutron absorbers. When the reactor malfunctions or when operators need to shut off the reactor for any other reason technicians can remotely plunge control rods into the reactor core to soak up neutrons and shut down the nuclear reaction.



Can a reactor melt down once the nuclear reaction is stopped?

Even after the control rods have done their job and arrested the fission reaction the fuel rods retain a great deal of heat. What is more, the uranium atoms that have already split in two produce radioactive by-products that themselves give off a great deal of heat. So the reactor core continues to produce heat in the absence of fissioning.



If the rest of the reactor is operating normally, pumps will continue to circulate coolant (usually water) to carry away the reactor core's heat. In Japan the March 11 earthquake and tsunami caused blackouts that cut off the externally sourced AC power for the reactors' cooling system. According to published reports, backup diesel generators at the power plant failed shortly thereafter, leaving the reactors uncooled and in serious danger of overheating.



Without a steady coolant supply, a hot reactor core will continuously boil off the water surrounding it until the fuel is no longer immersed. If fuel rods remain uncovered, they may begin to melt, and hot, radioactive fuel can pool at the bottom of the vessel containing the reactor. In a worst-case meltdown scenario the puddle of hot fuel could melt through the steel containment vessel and through subsequent barriers meant to contain the nuclear material, exposing massive quantities of radioactivity to the outside world.



How can a meltdown be averted?

The Japanese plant's operators have made a number of attempts to cool the reactors, including pumping seawater into the reactor core to replenish the dwindling cooling fluid. The Tokyo Electric Power Company has also injected boric acid, an absorber of neutrons, into the reactors.



How does this incident compare with Chernobyl or Three Mile Island?

At present, three of the reactors at Fukushima Daiichi station are seriously crippled. Units 1 and 3 have experienced explosions that destroyed exterior walls, apparently from buildups of hydrogen gas produced by the zirconium in the fuel rods reacting with coolant water at extremely high temperatures—but the interior containment vessels there thus far seem to be intact. A third explosion was reported March 15 at reactor No. 2, and the situation there appears direr. Pressure in the suppression pool—a doughnut-shaped water vessel below the reactor—dropped after the explosion, indicating that the containment vessel had been compromised.



In reactor Nos. 1, 2 and 3 water levels dropped enough to leave the fuel assemblies temporarily uncovered; those fuel rods are presumed to have suffered damage. And a fire at a pool storing spent fuel rods at dormant reactor No. 4 is posing additional hazards to the few workers remaining at the site.



Japanese officials initially rated the incident a level 4, an "accident with local consequences," on the seven-tier International Nuclear and Radiological Event Scale (INES), but Princeton University physicist Frank von Hippel told The New York Times that the Fukushima Daiichi situation is "way past Three Mile Island already." Three Mile Island, the highest-profile U.S. nuclear accident, was classified level 5—an "accident with wider consequences".



At that Pennsylvania nuclear station in 1979 a cooling malfunction combined with worker error led to a partial meltdown—about half of the reactor core melted and formed a radioactive puddle at the bottom of the steel pressure vessel. The vessel remained intact, but some radiation did escape from the plant into the surrounding environment.



The 1986 Chernobyl accident was far more devastating; it rates as a 7, or a "major accident," on the INES scale. In Ukraine, then part of the Soviet Union, a power surge caused an explosion in one of the plant's reactors, releasing huge doses of radioactive fallout into the air. Two plant workers died within hours, according to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission; 28 more died in the following months from radiation poisoning. The fallout from Chernobyl was widespread, and the health effects of the disaster are difficult to quantify. A report from the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation found that 6,000 individuals who were under the age of 18 in Ukraine, Belarus or Russia at the time of the disaster had by 2006 contracted thyroid cancer, "a substantial fraction" of whom likely contracted the disease due to radiation exposure.
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