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13 de setembro de 2013

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Endless Fukushima catastrophe: Many generations’ health at stake



 This handout picture taken by Japan's Nuclear Regulation Authority on August 23, 2013 shows nuclear watchdog members including Nuclear Regulation Authority members in radiation protection suits inspecting contaminated water tanks at the Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO) Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant in the town of Okuma, Fukushima prefecture. (AFP Photo)

Bio-accumulation of radioactive elements around Fukushima will devastate many future Japanese generations, while the Pacific Ocean is also being contaminated by leaking radioactive water. Yet there is still no good solution from the Japanese government.
As I watched the tsunami power into the reactor complex at Fukushima on March 11, 2011, I realized the world would never be the same again. No nuclear reactor can withstand being drowned in a massive wave of water without catastrophic consequences.
There were three nuclear reactors undergoing fission at the time while one, unit four, had just been emptied of its radioactive core, which was now situated in an unprotected cooling pool on the roof of the building, 100 feet (30 meters) above the ground. As the power supply to the reactors was disrupted during the earthquake, and the auxiliary diesel generators in the basements of the reactors failed because they were flooded, the pumps which supplied up to 1 million gallons of cooling water to each reactor failed.
Within hours the intensely hot radioactive cores in units one, two and three started to melt. As they melted, the zirconium metal cladding on the uranium fuel rods reacted with water to produce hydrogen which exploded with overwhelming intensity in the buildings of units one, two, three and four releasing huge amounts of radioactive elements into the air.
On March 15 alone, it is estimated that 100 quadrillion Becquerels of cesium, 400 quadrillion of iodine plus 400 quadrillion of inert noble gases (xenon, krypton and argon) escaped. Over a period of time two-and-a-half to three times more noble gases were released into the air than at Chernobyl.
Noble gases are very high energy gamma emitters similar to x-rays, which penetrate human bodies externally and, when inhaled, are absorbed from the lungs and stored in fatty tissue exposing nearby organs, including the gonads, to gamma radiation. Cesium and iodine 131 are also gamma and beta emitters which enter the body by inhalation and ingestion. But over 100 other radioactive elements were also released during the weeks and months of the accident and thousands of people were exposed to clouds of radiation. The damaged reactors continue to emit radioactive airborne releases to this day.

This handout picture taken by Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO) on August 22, 2013 shows a TEPCO worker checking radiation levelS around a contaminated water tank at TEPCO's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant at Okuma town in Fukushima prefecture. (AFP/TEPCO)
This handout picture taken by Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO) on August 22, 2013 shows a TEPCO worker checking radiation levelS around a contaminated water tank at TEPCO's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant at Okuma town in Fukushima prefecture. (AFP/TEPCO)
Luckily the wind was blowing east across the Pacific in the first several days, taking 80 percent of the fallout with it - much of which was deposited in the Pacific Ocean. But around March 15 the wind changed, blowing to the northwest and large areas of Japan, including parts of Tokyo became severely contaminated. Approximately 2 million people are still living in highly contaminated areas in the Fukushima Prefecture and elsewhere, areas so radioactive that similarly-populated areas were quickly evacuated by the Soviets after the Chernobyl accident.
At the time of the Fukushima accident an unprecedented quantity of highly radioactive water was also released into the Pacific Ocean. But it hasn’t stopped. TEPCO (Tokyo Electric Power Company) now admits that 300 tons of this water has been leaking into the Pacific every day since the accident 30 months ago and so far 270,000 tons of water has been released. 
It is becoming apparent that the three molten cores, each weighing 120 to 130 tons have not only melted their way through 6 inches of steel in the reactor vessels, but they now either sit on concrete floors of the severely cracked containment buildings or they have melted their way into the earth itself – this, in nuclear parlance, is called ‘A Melt Through to China Syndrome’.
Because the reactor complex was built upon an ancient river bed located at the base of a mountain range, huge quantities of water flowing down from the mountains (1,000 tons daily) are circulating around these highly radioactive cores absorbing large concentrations of radioactive elements.
TEPCO constructed a type of concrete dam near the sea front to prevent this radioactive water from entering the sea. But the continuous flow of water built up behind the dam and overflowed into the Pacific Ocean. Each reactor core contains as much radiation as that released by 1,000 Hiroshima-sized bombs and contains more than 200 different radioactive elements, which variously last seconds to millions of years.

Medical implications

Water in the bay beside Fukushima is highly contaminated with tritium, which is constantly increasing in concentration and now measures 4,700 Becquerels per liter - the highest level ever recorded in seawater. Furthermore a total of 20 to 40 trillion Becquerels of tritium have now been discharged into the Pacific Ocean –a Becquerel is one disintegration of radiation per second. Tritium is radioactive hydrogen, H3. It combines with oxygen to form tritiated water HTO, which is very dangerous. It emits an electron, or beta particle which, if lodged in the body, is very energetic.
Tritium combines within the DNA molecule inducing mutations. In numerous animal experiments tritium causes birth defects, cancers of various organs including brain and ovaries, and it induces testicular atrophy and mental retardation at surprisingly low doses. Tritium is organically taken up in food and is concentrated in fish, vegetables, and other food groups, and it remains radioactive for over 120 years. Ingestion of contaminated food causes 10 percent to combine in the human body where it can remain for many years continuously irradiating cells.
One of the main elements is cesium, a potassium mimicker, which concentrates in the heart, endocrine organs and muscles where it can induce cardiac irregularities, heart attacks, diabetes, hypothyroidism or thyroid cancer and a very malignant muscle cancer called rhabdomyosarcoma. Cesium remains radioactive for 300 years and concentrates in the food chain.

Covers are installed for a spent fuel removal operation at Japan's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant's unit 4 reactor building (R), in Okuma town in Fukushima prefecture on June 12, 2013. (AFP Photo)
Covers are installed for a spent fuel removal operation at Japan's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant's unit 4 reactor building (R), in Okuma town in Fukushima prefecture on June 12, 2013. (AFP Photo)
Another very dangerous element is strontium 90, which also is poisonous for 300 years. Analogous to calcium, it concentrates in grass and milk, then relocates into bones, teeth and breast milk where it can cause bone cancer, leukemia or breast cancer.
Amongst the many other radioactive elements which are almost certainly escaping into the sea is plutonium which lasts for 240,000 years and is one of the most potent carcinogens known, such that a millionth of a gram can cause cancer. Each reactor core contains 500lbs of plutonium, but Reactor 3 contains even more, because it also contained plutonium/uranium fuel rods which were placed inside the core as an experiment.
As plutonium resembles iron in the body, it induces cancers in the lung if inhaled, and also cancers in the liver, bone, testicle and ovary. As an iron analogue, it readily crosses the placenta causing severe birth deformities similar to those produced by the drug thalidomide. All radioactive elements which irradiate the reproductive organs will induce genetic mutations in the sperm and eggs, thereby increasing the incidence of genetic diseases over future generations such as diabetes, cystic fibrosis, hemophilia, hemochromatosis and 6000 others.
These are only several of over 100 deadly radioactive poisons polluting the Pacific Ocean and the air, each of which has its own pathway in the food chain and the human body. Radioactive elements are tasteless, odorless and invisible, and it takes many years for cancers and other radiation-related diseases to manifest – five to 80 years for most cancers.
Children are 10 to 20 times more sensitive to the carcinogenic effects of radiation than adults, fetuses are thousands of times more so. One x-ray to the pregnant abdomen doubles the likelihood of leukemia in the baby. Females are also more sensitive than men at all ages. Radiation is cumulative, there is no safe dose and each dose received by a person adds to the risk of developing cancer.

Of great concern is the fact that 18 cases of childhood thyroid cancer in children under the age of 18 have already been diagnosed and 25 more are suspected in Fukushima. This is a remarkably short incubation time for cancer, indicating that these children almost certainly received a very high dose of iodine 131 plus other carcinogenic radioactive elements that were and are still being inhaled and ingested.

A worker checks radiation levels on the window of a bus during a media tour at Japan's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant in the town of Okuma, Fukushima prefecture on June 12, 2013. (AFP Photo)
A worker checks radiation levels on the window of a bus during a media tour at Japan's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant in the town of Okuma, Fukushima prefecture on June 12, 2013. (AFP Photo)
Thyroid cancer in Chernobyl victims did not appear for four years. Thyroid cancer is rarely found in young children. Iodine 131 is radioactive for 100 days, and is a potent carcinogen. Iodine 129 on the other hand lasts millions of years. Over 350,000 children still live and go to school in highly radioactive areas, and as juvenile thyroid cancers are arising, so the number of leukemia cases will start to increase about two years from now, with solid cancers of various organs diagnosed about 11 years later. These will increase in frequency for the next 70 -80 years.
Food in the contaminated zone will remain radioactive for hundreds of years because it will continue to bio-accumulate radioactive elements from the soil, thus ensuring that an increased incidence of cancer will devastate many future Japanese generations.
Medical doctors in Japan are reporting that they have been ordered by their superiors not to tell the patients that their problems are radiation related.

Water and the Pacific Ocean

Now back to the reactor complex. TEPCO is still pumping hundreds of tons of salt water over molten reactor cores daily as another 1,000 tons of underground water also flows through the damaged reactors. In order to try and control this frightening situation, TEPCO is pumping 300 to 400 tons of this highly contaminated water on a daily basis into 1,060 huge holding tanks adjacent to the reactor complex. These tanks now contain 350,000 tons of water and more tanks are being added each week to accommodate this endless flow of water.
TEPCO originally attempted to filter this water using an Advanced Liquid Processing System to remove some of the radioactive contaminants, but one of its tanks corroded and it was closed down in June this year.
The tanks have been hastily constructed to last five years, some have rubber seams, others have metal bolts which are corroding and very few are securely welded. Recently, workers discovered that the highly radioactive water is leaking and contaminating the tank site. Three hundred tons of water escaped from a tank measuring 100 millisieverts, or 10 rems, per hour and some of this water had also drained into the sea. A nuclear worker is allowed a yearly exposure of 5 rems. Because of this finding the present accident level was raised from 1 to 3, the original accident being labeled 7 - equivalent to Chernobyl, and the worst possible case.
It is suspected that many more tanks are leaking. Until recently TEPCO had only two men patrolling 1,060 tanks twice a day armed with inadequate Geiger counters. When new instruments were provided, radiation of 1,800 millisieverts per hour, or 180 rems, was discovered in leaked water at another tank, while several days later a reading measuring 2,200 millsieverts, or 220 rems, per hour was discovered! This was estimated to be mostly beta radiation, which would not penetrate the clothing of the workers. However high levels of gamma are radiating continually from the tanks and gamma, like x-rays goes right through a human body unimpeded.

Tokyo Electric Power Company's (TEPCO) tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Fukushima prefecture is pictured in this combination photo taken December 15, 2011 (top), and September 6, 2013, released by Kyodo on September 7, 2013, ahead of the two-and-a-half-year anniversary of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. Would-be 2020 Olympic cities of Madrid, Istanbul and Tokyo parade before the Games' organising body on September 7, 2013 in a "least ugly" contest as they attempt to conceal their blemishes and win the right to host the world's biggest sporting extravaganza. (Reuters/Kyodo)
Tokyo Electric Power Company's (TEPCO) tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Fukushima prefecture is pictured in this combination photo taken December 15, 2011 (top), and September 6, 2013, released by Kyodo on September 7, 2013, ahead of the two-and-a-half-year anniversary of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. Would-be 2020 Olympic cities of Madrid, Istanbul and Tokyo parade before the Games' organising body on September 7, 2013 in a "least ugly" contest as they attempt to conceal their blemishes and win the right to host the world's biggest sporting extravaganza. (Reuters/Kyodo)

The LD 50, a dose at which half an exposed population dies, is 250 rems! Not only are these workers in serious jeopardy, but TEPCO is fast running out of people to manage this disaster which could continue for 100 years or more. TEPCO said tritium levels in water taken from a well close to a number of storage tanks holding irradiated water rose to 64,000 becquerels per liter on Tuesday September 10, from 4,200 becquerels/liter at the same location on Sunday.
They are also running out of room to accommodate more tanks, the water keeps coming, and if there is another earthquake measuring 6 or above on the Richter scale, the plastic piping connecting the tanks and the tanks themselves could shatter releasing their contents into the ocean. If an earthquake does not eventuate, what will the Japanese do with this water? Obviously it is going to have to be discharged into the Pacific Ocean. However Prime Minister Abe recently announced that the government will spend $320 million dollars to construct a wall of ice 0.9 miles (1.45km) in length and 100 feet deep behind and around the complex to prevent the mountain aquifer from rushing in to engulf the damaged cores.
Arnie Gundersen, a nuclear engineer estimates that trying to clean the site and control the situation would cost at the minimum half a trillion dollars, and he says that the ice wall may not even be deep enough to block the water.
Furthermore maintaining the ice wall would require huge amounts of electricity, presumably to be generated by coal as the reactors will all be closed, which will add to global warming and obviously the ice will melt should there be a power outage. Not a good solution as the ice must remain intact for over 100 years. The government also plans to spend $150 million attempting to remove the radioactive elements from the water so they can be discharged into the sea, a Sisyphean task, virtually impossible to conduct successfully.
But there are other problems which defy solution. The whole reactor site sits on sodden ground, which has now become unstable, muddy and possibly liquefied. The site itself experiences many minor earthquakes each day, but should a quake greater than 6 or 7 on the Richter scale occur, it is likely that one or several of the buildings could collapse with absolutely disastrous consequences.
To be continued...
in  http://rt.com/op-edge/fukushima-catastrophe-health-japan-803/

26 de maio de 2011

Caça ao melro já é permitida por lei e choca associações




Os caçadores vão poder matar, por dia, 40 melros, aves emblemáticas e até agora protegidas por lei. A medida está a chocar as associações do sector, que garantem que tal não foi negociado na definição do calendário venatório para os próximos três anos. «Abrir caça ao melro não faz sentido, nem do ponto de vista da caça, nem do ponto de vista gastronómico.

Nenhum caçador se sentirá bem ao abater este ‘pássaro de jardim’», defende Helder Ramos, da Federação Portuguesa de Caçadores (APC), acusando a Autoridade Florestal Nacional (AFN), que elabora o calendário e define as espécies que podem ser abatidas, de ter agido à revelia das negociações com as associações: «Esta inclusão nunca foi colocada em cima da mesa». Por outro lado, o dirigente avisa que está em causa uma caça perigosa, pois «o melro tem um voo baixo, ao nível do tórax do caçador, e costuma andar em zonas arborizadas, o que leva a um aumento de tiros com poucas condições de segurança».

Os ambientalistas, por seu lado, acreditam que a inclusão do melro como espécie cinegética (definida numa portaria publicada a 7 de Abril) só pode ser engano. «Não faz qualquer sentido, do ponto de vista técnico, considerar o melro uma espécie cinegética.

Só admitimos que seja um erro, uma gralha»
, reage Samuel Infante, da Quercus, esperando que o assunto seja «rapidamente resolvido».
A opinião é partilhada por Carlos Cruz, da Liga de Protecção da Natureza, (LPN). «Só pode ser incompetência grave de alguém», considera o ornitólogo, e questiona: «Como é que alguém vai disparar contra um melro? A seguir serão os pardais?»

Mas, para Jacinto Amaro, presidente da Fencaça, há uma explicação: a tutela quer usar os caçadores para acabar com a praga de melros que existe no país desde 1986, e que, entre muitos outros problemas, destrói produções frutícolas: «Isto é a AFN a tentar livrar-se de um problema – o de ter de passar milhares de autorizações especiais aos agricultores para que possam espantar os melros das suas produções».
Esta ideia é, no entanto, liminarmente rejeitada pelos especialistas que lembram não existir dados conclusivos sobre a quantidades de melros em território nacional.
«Em primeiro lugar, não é aos caçadores que cabe o controlo sanitário; em segundo, os melros são uma espécie comum, sim, estão bem distribuídos por todo o território, mas nenhum dado científico aponta para o seu aumento ou diminuição», responde Helder Costa, autor do único estudo sobre este pássaro feito nos últimos anos em Portugal (publicado no Atlas das Aves, de 2008, pelo Instituto de Conservação da Natureza).
O ornitólogo e antigo presidente da Sociedade Portuguesa para o Estudo das Aves (SPEA) sublinha que «apenas daqui a alguns anos serão conhecidos quais dados estatísticos relativos aos melros», uma vez que o comportamento destes pássaros está agora a ser estudado por aquela entidade.
Por isso, também critica a inclusão do melro no calendário, considerando a decisão «estranhíssima». «Os fundamentos técnicos, a existir, estão no segredo dos deuses»
, conclui.

A medida começa a ser aplicada já na próxima época de caça, no caso dos melros, de Novembro a Fevereiro. Contactada pelo SOL, a AFN remeteu o assunto para a tutela, que não prestou esclarecimentos. Entretanto, começou a circular na internet uma petição contra a caça ao melro.
por Sónia Balasteiro

16 de maio de 2009

Detectada cocaína e LSD no ar em Madrid e Barcelona



Investigadores espanhóis detectaram vestígios no ar de cocaína e LSD, juntamente com outras três drogas, nas cidades de Madrid e Barcelona.
O Conselho Superior Científico de Investigação, um organismo governamental, publicou no seu site um relatório que denuncia vestígios de anfetaminas, opiáceos, substâncias derivadas da cannabis e LSD no ar de Madrid e Barcelona. No entanto, a entidade descarta haver motivo para alarme.
«Nem mesmo se vivêssemos durante mil anos iríamos inalar o equivalente a uma dose de cocaína através do ar», segundo Miren Lopez de Alda, um dos autores do estudo.
Ainda segundo o grupo científico, «em nenhum caso se podem considerar estes níveis como representativos da qualidade do ar nestas duas cidades».
Em Madrid, os testes foram realizados junto a um edifício em ruínas frequentado por traficantes de droga. E, tanto em Madrid como em Barcelona, os estudos foram conduzidos próximo a universidades.
O grupo refere ainda ter encontrado concentrações mais elevadas das referidas drogas ao fim-de-semana, o que sugere que o consumo é maior nestes períodos.
sexta-feira, 15 de Maio de 2009 15:54
Diário Digital

22 de abril de 2009

Geoparque de Arouca reconhecido pela UNESCO



O Geoparque de Arouca integra desde hoje a Rede Europeia de Geoparques, que, sob a tutela da UNESCO - Organização das Nações Unidas para a Educação, a Ciência e a Cultura, reúne todos os territórios considerados património geológico da Humanidade.
Inaugurado a 5 de Dezembro de 2007, o Geoparque de Arouca envolve uma área de 327 quilómetros quadrados e abrange um total de 41 geo-sítios - termo técnico para os «sítios com interesse geológico» que, segundo a UNESCO, têm «particular importância pelo seu carácter científico, raridade, encanto estético ou valor educacional».
No património de Arouca destacam-se as pistas fósseis dos quartzitos do vale do Paiva, e, sobretudo, duas ocorrências geológicas apontadas pelos especialistas como únicas no mundo: as trilobites e as pedras parideiras.
Em causa está, portanto, «um território de excepção», como observa o paleontólogo Artur Sá, coordenador científico do Geoparque de Arouca e docente do Departamento de Geologia da Universidade de Trás-os-Montes e Alto Douro.
Com a integração na Rede Europeia de Geoparques», refere o paleontólogo, «Arouca passa a ter um selo de garantia da UNESCO, uma prova de que reconhecem internacionalmente as qualidades do nosso território e das nossas valências».
O funcionamento em rede deverá agora «permitir o desenvolvimento de conhecimentos científicos e educativos que promovam, para além das fronteiras de cada país, os territórios de excepção que há na Europa e no mundo».
Artur Sá acredita, aliás, que a adesão do Geoparque de Arouca à Rede Global de Geoparques depende agora «de um mero «pro forma»».
O principal já foi feito: «Tivemos muito trabalho a nível da inventariação do território e do levantamento das suas ocorrências geológicas, mas o projecto contou desde a primeira hora com o apoio das pessoas que estão no terreno e das forças políticas do concelho de Arouca».
Esse envolvimento deve-se ao facto de que «em causa não está um parque nacional nem um parque natural, mas um território que coincide com todo o município de Arouca e que é feito por pessoas, para as pessoas».
Os geoparques da rede da UNESCO têm, afinal, que obedecer a uma estratégia de desenvolvimento sustentável que justifica que o seu património geológico funcione «como uma base agregadora das sinergias da região».
Diário Digital / Lusa

AGA – Associação Geoparque Arouca


21 de março de 2009

Bye Bye Birdie? One-Third of American Birds Are in Decline


The birds of America are in trouble, and those living in Hawaiian paradise are the worst off, according to a dire report issued by the U.S. Interior Department.
The State of the Birds report spreads the alarming news that one-third of bird species across the nation are endangered, threatened, or in serious decline due to habitat loss, polluted water, invasive species, and disease, says the study. Climate change will make things worse, and work is urgently needed to prevent “a global tragedy” of bird loss, the report added [The New York Times].
Bird species native to Hawaii, an isolated ecosystem, are particularly at risk, with 31 species currently listed as endangered. “That is the epicenter of extinctions and near-extinctions,” said John Fitzpatrick, director of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, which helped produce the study. “Hawaii is (a) borderline ecological disaster.” Hawaii’s native birds are threatened by the destruction of their habitats by invasive plant species and feral animals like pigs, goats and sheep. Diseases, especially those borne by mosquitoes, are another killer [
AP]. Researchers say that 71 bird species that were found only on Hawaii have gone extinct since humans first settled the islands.
The study presents data collected by government and academic scientists, as well as information contributed by amateur bird-watchers…. Overall, the United States is home to more than 800 species of birds; 67 of those are federally listed as endangered or threatened, with an additional 184 species causing concern because of they are narrowly distributed or have declining populations, the report said [
Reuters].
But Interior Secretary Ken Salazar did dole out a few crumbs of good news. The study found that herons, egrets, ducks and other birds that benefit from wetlands conservation were rebounding. Findings like this “show us that conservation can really work,” Mr. Salazar said [
The New York Times]. Birds of prey like the peregrine falcon and bald eagle have also made a comeback due to intense conservation efforts and a reduction in pesticide use.

27 de janeiro de 2009

Aviões: falcões são a «melhor tecnologia»


Os aeroportos portugueses têm vários sistemas para afugentar as aves da rota dos aviões, mas a «melhor tecnologia» continua a ser o falcão, disse à Lusa fonte da ANA-Aeroportos de Portugal.
Em Portugal, este perigo faz parte das preocupações «permanentes e constantes» da ANA, que neste momento está a conceber uma «tecnologia inovadora», revelou à Lusa Rui Oliveira, responsável pelo gabinete de comunicação daquela empresa.
No gabinete de segurança do aeroporto, os investigadores estão a desenvolver uma técnica para afugentar os pássaros que recorre a um feixe laser de cor verde que «a breve prazo deverá estar disponível», adiantou.
Até lá, os aeroportos portugueses contam com outros sistemas: canhões de gás, uma espécie de tubos que enviam uma explosão sonora, e sistemas de ultrasons só audíveis pelos pássaros. Mas, segundo Rui Oliveira, os falcões continuam a ser «a melhor tecnologia que existe».
Nos aeroportos de Lisboa e de Faro, existem tratadores e operadores que lidam diariamente com esta ave de rapina, que assim que é solta «desaparece tudo o que é pássaro».
«As fases de voo de aterragem e descolagem são aquelas em que as aeronaves atingem as altitudes em que estatisticamente está provado que são as fases mais críticas para a ocorrência deste tipo de eventos», explica o gabinete de imprensa da ANA, acrescentando que «a colisão de aves com aeronaves verifica-se ao longo dos anos e em todos os aeroportos, algumas sem consequências de registo».
Trata-se de uma situação «a que nenhum aeroporto do mundo é imune», refere ainda a ANA.

6 de dezembro de 2008

Little Birds: A Devastating Window on the War










Little Birds: A Devastating Window on the War by Gregory Elich



At a time when the Iraq war continues to be a defining issue on the American scene, it is ironic that the most powerful and uncompromising documentary on the subject remains almost entirely unknown and unseen in this country. It took Japanese filmmaker Takeharu Watai a year and a half to film more than 123 hours of footage in Iraq, which he managed to edit down to two unforgettable hours. The result is the stunning Little Birds, which plunges the viewer into the middle of the war, in all its sorrow and horror, and never lets up.
The film opens on the streets of Baghdad, just days before the war. Daily life appears ordinary on the surface, but this is belied by an underlying tension as Iraqis express their thoughts on the impending assault.
It is not long before bombs and missiles are raining down on Baghdad, and the violence is all the more shocking for the scenes of normality that preceded it. In contrast to the sanitized images the Western public has been fed, this documentary takes an unflinching view of the war. Homes are destroyed, civilians are torn apart by bombs, and blood is spattered everywhere. A man opens a shed, pointing to the bodies within, and bitterly comments, "So these are the weapons of mass destruction." As flies swarm over the bodies, he asks, "Are they weapons of mass destruction? Is it a biochemical weapon? Why?"



28 de janeiro de 2008

Linlithgow Palace - exemplo




NewsLatest news from around Historic Scotland
Linlithgow Big Loch Bird Watch
Published: 15 January 2008


Join the rangers at Linlithgow Palace for an afternoon of bird watching as part of the RSPB Big Garden Birdwatch on Sunday 27th January.
Play your part in the world’s biggest bird survey by bringing along your binoculars and helping the rangers count the winter wildfowl and garden birds.
A record-breaking 460,000 people took part in the last survey by counting the birds in their garden for an hour and then sending their results to the RSPB.
As well as bird watching the rangers are offering you the chance to build feeders to encourage even more birds into the area.
Ian Lewis, Historic Scotland countryside ranger, explains: “Water birds on the loch have come here from the far north as they think winter in Linlithgow is easy. Garden birds on the other hand find winter very hard, we need people to come along and help us build bird feeders to make life a little easier for them.”
“Linlithgow Loch is a Site of Special Scientific Interest due to its large wildfowl population and this location is an important natural habitat for an abundance of bird life. Our aim with these events is to encourage people to appreciate nature and the extensive and diverse range of birds which can be found here and around the local area.”

The Big Loch Birdwatch takes place at 13:00 on Sunday 27th January. As places are limited it is best to book in advance by calling 01506 842065 or emailing http://www.historic-scotland.gov.uk/hs.rangers_scotland.gsi.gov.uk. This event is suitable for all ages and younger children (under six) should be accompanied by an adult.
Notes for editors
The magnificent ruins of Linlithgow Palace - set in the Royal Park or Peel, beside Linlithgow Loch - are situated in Linlithgow, off the M9. Tel: 01506 842896. Admission: adult £5.00, child £2.50, concessions £4.00.
The Palace is perhaps best known as the birthplace of Mary Queen of Scots in 1542 and her father, James V, who was born in 1512. All of the Stewart kings lived here, and numerous renovations to its grand facades and chambers were carried out as each monarch sought to create the ideal modern palace. A royal manor had been on the site of the Palace since the 12th century. It was transformed by the English into a modern secure stronghold around 1302 before returning to Scottish hands in 1314. A fire in 1424 destroyed the stronghold and burgh of Linlithgow and James I then started building the structure we have today. Under James IV, it developed into a courtyard palace, while James V and James VI made major contributions to what had become the finest palace of the Stewart kings.
Blackness Castle is situated four miles north-east of Linlithgow, on the Firth of Forth, off the A904. Tel: 01506 834807. Admission: adult £4.00, child £2.00, concessions £3.00.
Blackness sits at the seaport which, in medieval times, served the royal burgh of Linlithgow. The first castle was built in the 15th century by one of Scotland’s most powerful families, the Crichtons. But Blackness was never destined to serve as a peaceful lordly residence. In 1453, it became a royal castle and its enduring roles were those of garrison fortress and state prison. In 1537, works started which transformed the castle into one of the most formidable artillery fortifications in Scotland. In 1650 it was besieged and badly damaged by Cromwell’s army but repaired under King Charles II and the restored fortress was then used to incarcerate Covenanters.
Linlithgow Palace is one of 345 splendid properties and sites throughout the country – from prehistoric dwellings and stone circles, castles and palaces, to abbeys and cathedrals - in the care of Historic Scotland. These include some of the leading tourism attractions in the country, including Edinburgh, Stirling, and Urquhart Castles, Fort George, Linlithgow Palace, the Border Abbeys, and Skara Brae. For further details visit: http://www.historic-scotland.gov.uk/index/properties.htm.
Historic Scotland’s Mission is: to safeguard Scotland’s historic environment and to promote its understanding and enjoyment.

26 de janeiro de 2008

FOCDE INFORMA



TVE nos informa que por reajustes de programación, este próximo lunes 28 NO se podrá emitir el reportaje sobre criadores y aficionados a los pájaros cantos, que estaba previsto en el programa "Repor" de la Primera de TVE. Tan pronto como tengamos noticias sobre la nueva fecha de emisión lo comunicaremos en esta página Web.

25 de janeiro de 2008

La afición por los pájaros atrae a cientos de personas en España.


La afición por los pájaros atrae a cientos de personas en España. 'Repor',
los lunes por La 1 a las 23:45.

REPOR” es un programa de producción propia de los Servicios Informativos de TVE. Con rigor, compromiso y voluntad de servicio. REPOR aborda en sus reportajes contenidos sociales, de denuncia o retratos y situaciones de la vida cotidiana que preocupan e interesan a todos.
REPOR” refleja todos estos asuntos desde la naturalidad y la agilidad. El estilo de los reportajes hace que los profesionales del equipo se conviertan en testigo mudo de lo que ocurre; las cámaras se acercan a las personas sin forzar las situaciones, porque “REPOR” busca ser un puente entre los ciudadanos y la televisión pública.
El lenguaje es directo, las escenas no se preparan, en definitiva se trata de mostrar lo que ocurre en nuestras ciudades, en nuestros pueblos, en nuestras calles.

Jan Kubelik plays "Zephyr" by Hubay