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Showing posts with label Video. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Video. Show all posts

Six months after Japan's tsunami, residents worry their plight is fading from view (video) (The Christian Science Monitor)

Minami-Sanriku, Japan – As memorial services were held across the northeast coastal regions to mark six months since the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, recovery from the vast disaster is proving to be painfully slow in many places.

Some of the worst-hit towns still resemble wasteland. More than 80,000 people remain in temporary accommodation. The nuclear crisis at Fukushima triggered by the tsunami is ongoing, and the new industry minister resigned over the weekend after making disparaging comments about the city.

“We pray for the lost lives and for the missing to be found as early as possible. We hope that people can return to this town and we can hear cheerful voices again,â€

RELATED: IN PICTURES: Japan's nuclear fallout

Mr. Sato had been in the town hall along with 130 staff when the tsunami struck. He was one of only 10 survivors when the 50-ft. waves came across the roof of the building and washed away 20 of the 30 people who had made it that far.

Most of the residents of the town returned for the service from other areas, as Minami-Sanriku remains largely uninhabitable. Thousands of tons of debris were piled into mountains of wood, earth, metal, and concrete along the waterfront.

A boat rests on the second floor of the former city hospital, facing away from the sea, where the tsunami deposited it as the huge wave pulled back to where it came from after obliterating 95 percent of the town.

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Recognizing sacrifices Red steel girders are all that is left of the town’s disaster response center where a young local government worker, Miki Endo, famously stayed at her post sounding an alarm and urging residents to evacuate, until the tsunami engulfed the building and she went missing.

People came from as far as Tokyo to pay their respects at the small makeshift shrine that has appeared in the shell of the building, dedicated to Ms. Endo’s sacrifice. Some residents of Minami-Sanriku want the remains of the building to be turned into a permanent monument to her heroism.

A cluster of 20 prefab housing units behind the Bayside Arena, where Sunday morning’s service was held, is now home to a fraction of the town’s people who lost their homes on March 11.

Kaeko Gyoba was in a club for Minami-Sanriku’s elderly residents with her husband when the earthquake struck. They made it up to the fourth floor and were spared as the waves swept through the three stories below, but left the building standing when the waves receded. It was one of the few buildings spared in the entire town.

“We spent two nights up there until a Self-Defense Force helicopter was able to land at the elementary school nearby and get us out,” says Ms. Gyoba.She stayed with relatives near Tokyo after the disaster, but she returned last month to be with the rest of her family, who now occupy five of the small, flimsy-looking temporary houses.

“It’s very tough living here, I just can’t get used to it. There’s nowhere in the town to shop, you need a car to go anywhere, and I worry how cold it will be in the winter,” says Gyoba. “And none of the family have jobs now. They all worked on the ocean, farming seaweed and oysters. Everything was swept away.”

Fading from public consciousness? Despite the nationwide attention that the six-month memorials have been receiving, some of those still struggling to put their lives back together feel they are gradually fading from people’s consciousness in the rest of the country. There is also anger at politicians in Tokyo who they see as more concerned with partisan fighting than focusing on helping the region’s recovery.

Even the leadership contest to replace former Prime Minister Naoto Kan – heavily criticized for his handling of the crisis – was seen as a self-indulgent distraction by many in the region. His replacement, Yoshihiko Noda, has already lost his trade and industry minister, only eight days after being sworn in.

On his first visit to the disaster zone last week, Trade Minister Yoshio Hachiro joked with a reporter accompanying him on the trip about infecting him with radiation by wiping his jacket on the journalist after coming out of the no-go zone around the Fukushima nuclear plant. The minister went on to describe the area around the stricken facility as, “really like a town of death.”

Hachiro’s behavior provoked outrage not just among residents of Fukushima, but across Japan’s north-east coast. For many, the minister’s attitude betrayed a lack of real empathy from Tokyo politicians with the victims of the triple disasters, and his tearful apology afterward convinced few.

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New Surveillance Video Footage Captures Joplin Tornado's Fury (ContributorNetwork)

East Middle School in Joplin, Mo., was completed two years ago to serve the students in a growing city. A brand-new facility was part of a larger move by the district to create modern buildings to foster a better learning environment for kids in Joplin.

New surveillance video released by the school system shows the building took a direct hit from the massive EF5 tornado that tore through the city May 22, 2011.

Posted to the Joplin Globe's YouTube page, the nearly six minute video shows four views of the tornado's destruction.

The first view is of the inside of the commons area. On the edge of the screen you can see doors leading to the outside of the building, which is seen in another view later in the footage. It appears to be a quiet day as school was thankfully not in session on Sunday evening. There even appears to be brightness outside as there is no indication from this initial view that there is something wrong about to happen.

Lights began to flicker as power begins to fluctuate, probably due to power lines being whipped around outside. About 40 seconds into the footage, the brightness outside suddenly goes away. Lightning flashes can be seen on the floor, reflected from outside. Then debris flies inside, water rushes over the floor and benches that were stationary are moved several feet.

For a about 10 seconds, there is a lull in the wind and then suddenly the same debris that got blown into the commons area gets swirled around and almost sucked out as the tornado moves by. Then the full force of the winds are felt and the view ends.

The second view is of the main entrance, starting at 1:48 into the video. You see lighting outside and then a door has its glass blown out. Within 90 seconds, the ceiling gets ripped off and the camera falls down and dangles towards the floor. Even though it's about two hours until sunset, it is pitch black outside.

The auditorium was one of the hardest hit parts of the school. Again, the camera was mounted on the ceiling as it viewed the destruction around it.

The last view captures the twister's fury outside the school near the commons area that was viewed inside at the beginning of the video. Again, it starts out looking like a bright day with just a little rain at the 4:05 mark, but then the images turn for the worse. Lightning is seen in the distance and then it turns very dark. Metal is whipped around and you can sparks from power lines as the tornado wreaks its havoc on the school in the last part of the video.

You can also see video of what the damage looked like after the tornado had gone through. There is footage of the main entrance and the heavily damaged gymnasium.

If there had been students at the school, the tornado could have been much more tragic.

I'm still wondering when, and if, there will be footage from Joplin's traffic light cameras. There are traffic monitoring cameras throughout the city to monitor conditions on Joplin's roads. The camera system surely would have picked up some kind of storm damage in the city and could provide clues as to how cars would have swirled through the debris.


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Video: Your 3-Day National Weather Forecast

Watch what the experts at The Weather Channel ® have to say about the weather trends in the United States for the next 3-days.

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