Thursday, August 06, 2020

#HIROSHIMA75
THE ATOMIC AGE BORN IN HORROR
From Manhattan to Hiroshima: the race for the atom bomb

Issued on: 06/08/2020 -

A photo from the National Archives of the Japanese December 7, 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES/AFP/Fil

Tokyo (AFP)

The atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki capped six years of top-secret work by scientists from Europe and North America. Here is an overview of how that process unfolded.

- Einstein warning -

In 1939, Albert Einstein signs a letter warning US president Franklin D. Roosevelt of the destructive potential of nuclear fission, which was discovered by the German chemist Otto Hahn. The letter says the process could result in "extremely powerful bombs of a new type". Roosevelt creates the Advisory Body on Uranium.


- Pearl Harbor -

On December 7, 1941, Japanese warplanes destroy much of the US Pacific fleet based at Pearl Harbor. The next day, the United States enters World War II.

- The Manhattan Project -

In August 1942, the US officially launches a top-secret programme to develop an atomic bomb. The project, which had been approved the previous year, comes to be known as the "Manhattan Project". Approximately two billion dollars are spent to achieve its goal.

In 1943, Robert Oppenheimer is named scientific director of a secret lab at Los Alamos, New Mexico that is to build the bomb. The project includes top physicists from the US, Britain and Canada, in addition to several who fled the Nazi occupation of their homelands in Europe.

- Potential targets -

Around spring 1945, possible targets are evaluated and a list drawn up of Japanese cities that could be hit with an atomic bomb. At the top of the list is Japan's seventh-largest city, Hiroshima. Kyoto is rejected as a target owing largely to its historic and cultural importance.

- Conventional bombs -

On March 9-10, 1945, US warplanes carry out massive firebombing attacks on Tokyo and other major Japanese cities. Around 100,000 people die in the capital alone.

- Battle of Okinawa -

On March 26, the battle of Okinawa begins. More than 100,000 Japanese soldiers and a similar number of civilians die over the next three months, while 12,000 US soldiers are also killed. The battle is used by US officials to justify using atomic bombs, since an invasion of mainland Japan is forecast to result in an even higher cost.

On April 12, Roosevelt dies and Harry Truman becomes president of the United States and learns of the "Manhattan Project".

- German surrender -

On May 8, Germany surrenders, but fighting continues in Asia and the Pacific.

- First American test -

Between May and July, components of the atomic bombs are shipped to Tinian, an island in the Marianas chain from where B-29 bombers are able to reach Japan.

On July 16, at 5:30 am, the "Trinity" test takes place near Alamogordo, New Mexico, demonstrating the awesome power of an atomic bomb and marking the dawn of the nuclear age.

On July 25, Truman agrees to a mission to drop an atomic bomb on Japan. It included approval to drop additional bombs as soon as they became available.

- Allied ultimatum -

On July 26, in the Potsdam Declaration, Britain, China and the United States warn Japan that it must surrender or face "prompt and utter destruction".

Japan decides to "ignore" the ultimatum, although the word used - -- mokusatsu -- also translates as "no comment".

- Hiroshima and Nagasaki -

On August 6 the US B-29 bomber "Enola Gay" drops a 9,000-pound atomic bomb over Hiroshima at 8:15 am, killing 140,000 people by the end of December, according to a widely accepted toll. Truman tells Japanese leaders that if they do not surrender "they may expect a rain of ruin from the air, the like of which has never been seen on this Earth".

On August 8, the Soviet Union declares war on Japan.

On August 9, a second atomic bomb explodes over Nagasaki at 11:02 am, killing 74,000 people.

On August 15, Japanese Emperor Hirohito tells his nation it has lost the war. He remains on the throne during post-war reconstruction of the country.

- First Soviet bomb -

On August 29, 1949, four years after Hiroshima and Nagasaki are destroyed, the Soviet Union successfully tests its own atomic bomb in Kazakhstan and becomes the world's second nuclear power.

burs/ang-jmy/kh-sah/jah


NYT PHOTOS
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/06/world/asia/hiroshima-nagasaki-japan-photos.html


© 2020 AFP
#HIROSHIMA75
BIRTH OF THE ATOMIC AGE
'Unspeakable horror': the attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki


Issued on: 06/08/2020

Japan this week marks the 75th anniversary of the atomic bomb attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki Handout Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum/AFP/File

Tokyo (AFP)

Japan on Thursday marked 75 years since the world's first atomic bomb attack, which killed around 140,000 people in Hiroshima and left many more deeply traumatised and even stigmatised.

A second bomb was dropped on Nagasaki on August 9, 1945, killing another 74,000 people.

Here are some facts about the devastating attacks:


- The bombs -

The first atomic bomb was dropped on the western city of Hiroshima on August 6, 1945 by the US bomber Enola Gay.

The bomb was nicknamed "Little Boy" but its impact was anything but small.

It detonated about 600 metres from the ground, with a force equivalent to 15,000 tonnes of TNT, and killed 140,000 people.

Tens of thousands died instantly, while others succumbed to injuries or illness in the weeks, months and years that followed.

Three days later the US dropped a second bomb, dubbed "Fat Man", on the city of Nagasaki, killing another 74,000 people.

The attacks remain the only time atomic bombs have been used in wartime.

- The attacks -

When the bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, the first thing people noticed was an "intense ball of fire" according to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

Temperatures near the blast reached an estimated 7,000 degrees Celsius (12,600 Fahrenheit), which caused fatal burns within a radius of about three kilometres (five miles).

ICRC experts say there were cases of temporary or permanent blindness due to the intense flash of light, and subsequent related damage such as cataracts.

A whirlwind of heat generated by the explosion also ignited thousands of fires that burned several square kilometres (miles) of the largely wooden city. A firestorm that consumed all available oxygen caused more deaths by suffocation.

It has been estimated that burn- and fire-related casualties accounted for more than half of the immediate deaths in Hiroshima.

The explosion generated an enormous shock wave that in some cases literally carried people away. Others were crushed to death inside collapsed buildings or injured or killed by flying debris.

"I remember the charred bodies of little children lying around the hypocentre area like black rocks," Koichi Wada, a witness who was 18 at the time of the Nagasaki attack, has said of the bombing.

- Radiation effects -

The bomb attacks unleashed radiation that proved deadly both immediately and over the longer term.

Radiation sickness was reported in the attack's aftermath by many who survived the initial blast and firestorm.

Acute radiation symptoms include vomiting, headaches, nausea, diarrhoea, haemorrhaging and hair loss, with radiation sickness fatal for many within a few weeks or months.

Bomb survivors, known as "hibakusha", also experienced longer-term effects including elevated risks of thyroid cancer and leukaemia, and both Hiroshima and Nagasaki have seen elevated cancer rates.

Of 50,000 radiation victims from both cities studied by the Japanese-US Radiation Effects Research Foundation, about 100 died of leukaemia and 850 suffered from radiation-induced cancers.

The group found no evidence however of a "significant increase" in serious birth defects among survivors' children.

- The aftermath -

The twin bombings dealt the final blow to imperial Japan, which surrendered on August 15, 1945, bringing an end to World War II.

Historians have debated whether the devastating bombings ultimately saved lives by bringing an end to the conflict and averting a ground invasion.

But those calculations meant little to survivors, many of whom battled decades of physical and psychological trauma, as well as the stigma that sometimes came with being a hibakusha.

Despite their suffering and their status as the first victims of the atomic age, many survivors were shunned -- in particular for marriage -- because of prejudice over radiation exposure.

Survivors and their supporters have become some of the loudest and most powerful voices opposing the use of nuclear weapons, meeting world leaders in Japan and overseas to press their case.

Last year, Pope Francis met several hibakusha on visits to Hiroshima and Nagasaki, paying tribute to the "unspeakable horror" suffered by victims of the attacks.

In 2016, Barack Obama became the first sitting US president to visit Hiroshima. He offered no apology for the attack, but embraced survivors and called for a world free of nuclear weapons.

© 2020 AFP

India appoints veteran politician in-charge 

of restive OCCUPIED Kashmir


Barbed wire is seen laid on a deserted road during restrictions in Srinagar, August 5, 2019. — Reuters pic
Barbed wire is seen laid on a deserted road during restrictions in Srinagar, August 5, 2019. — Reuters 

SRINAGAR, Aug 6 — India's federal government named a former telecoms minister today to lead the restive region of Kashmir, where it hopes to accelerate economic development and end years of strife.
Manoj Sinha, a leader in Prime Minister Narendra Modi's ruling party, will replace career bureaucrat G.C. Murmu as lieutenant governor of Jammu and Kashmir, a government statement said.
The appointment came a day after authorities ensured that the first anniversary of the revocation of Kashmir's constitutional autonomy passed off without any street protests amid heavy deployment of police and restrictions on public movement.
Last August, Modi's government removed special privileges accorded to Jammu and Kashmir, India's only Muslim-majority state, took away its statehood and split it into two federally-administered territories by carving out Buddhist-dominated Ladakh.
The move angered Kashmiris as well as Pakistan. India and Pakistan have fought two of their three wars over the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir.
Today, anti-India militants shot dead a village council head from Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party in Kashmir's Kulgam district, police said.
“He was shot multiple times outside his residence,” a police officer said. — Reuters

Human trials of virus vaccine set to begin in Indonesia

Minister of State Owned Enterprises Erick Thohir tours the vaccine production facility at the Bio Farma office, amid the Covid-19 outbreak in Bandung, West Java, Indonesia August 4, 2020. — Antara Foto via Reuters
Minister of State Owned Enterprises Erick Thohir tours the vaccine production facility at the Bio Farma office, amid the Covid-19 outbreak in Bandung, West Java, Indonesia August 4, 2020. — Antara Foto via Reuters
BANDUNG, Aug 6 — Human trials on a potential coronavirus vaccine are due to start in Indonesia next week as part of a collaboration between state-owned pharmaceutical company Bio Farma and China's Sinovac Biotech Ltd, a senior researcher said.
The launch of the vaccine trial comes as Indonesia has struggled to contain the spread of the novel coronavirus, with a consistently escalating nuustber of cases.
The phase 3 clinical trial is set to begin on Aug. 11 and will involve 1,620 volunteers aged between 18 and 59, Professor Kusnandi Rusmil, head researcher at Bandung’s Padjadjaran University, told reporters.
Half of the participants will receive the vaccine over a six-month period, while the rest will receive a placebo, he said, noting 800 volunteers had been signed up so far.
“We want to have our vaccines so we can use it for our people,” Rusmil told reporters.
As of yesterday, Indonesia had recorded 116,871 coronavirus infections and 5,432 deaths — the highest in East Asia.
The coronavirus pandemic has sparked a global race for a vaccine, with more than 100 in development and about a dozen already being tested on humans.
As Indonesia seeks to stem an ongoing wave of infections, the government has been vocal about the need to secure sufficient supplies of a vaccine amid concerns some nations may miss out.
Erick Thohir, Indonesia’s minister for state-owned enterprises, sought to reassure the public this week, saying that Bio Farma would be ready by year-end to produce 250 million doses a year should the Sinovac vaccine prove successful.
The Sinovac trial is one of several collaborations to produce a vaccine underway in the world's fourth-most populous nation. — Reuters

COVIDIOT 

Canadian pastor jailed in Myanmar for defying Covid-19 ban



Canadian preacher David Lah is escorted for trial in Yangon, Myanmar June 8, 2020. — AFP pic
Canadian preacher David Lah is escorted for trial in Yangon, Myanmar June 8, 2020. — AFP pic
YANGON, Aug 6 — A Canadian preacher who claimed Christians were safe from coronavirus was today jailed for three months in Myanmar after he and dozens of his followers became infected when he held a banned service.
The South-east Asian nation has so far weathered the pandemic well with just 357 confirmed cases and six deaths, although the low numbers tested make many fear the true figures are far higher.
Toronto-based David Lah, 43, was born in Myanmar and often returns to his motherland to preach.
The country imposed a ban on gatherings in mid-March, but footage emerged in early April of Lah holding a service in Yangon.
“If people hold the Bible and Jesus in their hearts, the disease will not come in,” he proclaimed in one video to a roomful of faithful.
“The only person who can cure and give peace in this pandemic is Jesus.”
Lah tested positive for coronavirus shortly afterwards, and dozens of confirmed cases were traced back to his followers.
The preacher was arrested after recovering from the illness in May and faced up to three years in jail for violating the Natural Disaster and Management Law.
Today, however, a Yangon court chose to be lenient.
Lah and his colleague Wai Tun had been sentenced to three months imprisonment, Lah's lawyer Aung Kyi Win told reporters outside the court, adding that time already served would be deducted.
A waiting crowd of the preacher's followers erupted into cheers and celebrations at the news.
The scandal even touched Myanmar's Christian vice-president Henry Van Thio and his family, who had attended an earlier service with Lah in February, although they later tested negative.
About six per cent of Buddhist-majority Myanmar's population identifies as one of the various Christian denominations in the country. — AFP

Related Articles


BREAKING NEWS
China sentences Canadian to death over drug charge, says court


CHINA PLAYS HUAWEI GO



Thursday, 06 Aug 2020

Flags of Canada and China are placed for the first China-Canada economic and financial strategy dialogue in Beijing, China, November 12, 2018. — Reuters pic

BEIJING, Aug 6 — A Chinese court sentenced a Canadian national to death today in a ruling that could further inflame tensions between China and Canada.

The Guangzhou Intermediate Court said in a statement it had handed Xu Weihong the sentence for manufacturing drugs, and all his personal property had been confiscated. — 

TWITTER & FACEBOOK DELETE TRUMP
Facebook deletes post from Donald Trump for 'spreading misinformation about coronavirus'



Barbara Ortutay

August 06 2020

Facebook has deleted a post by US President Donald Trump for the first time, saying it violated its policy against spreading misinformation about coronavirus.

The post in question featured a link to a Fox News video in which Mr Trump says children are “virtually immune” to the virus.

Facebook said the “video includes false claims that a group of people is immune from Covid-19 which is a violation of our policies around harmful Covid misinformation”.

A few hours later, Twitter temporarily blocked the Trump campaign from tweeting from its account until it removed a post with the same video.

The company said in a statement late on Wednesday the tweet violated its rules against Covid misinformation. When a tweet breaks its rules, Twitter asks users to remove the tweet in questions and bans them from posting anything else until they do.

The removal of the post is a change of tack for Facebook, which has previously opted to label – rather than delete – misleading statements.


Several studies suggest, but do not prove, that children are less likely to become infected than adults and more likely to have only mild symptoms.

But this is not the same as being “virtually immune” to the virus

A Centres for Disease Control and Prevention study involving 2,500 children published in April found that about one in five infected children were hospitalised compared to one in three adults.

ASYMPTOMATIC CHILD CARRIERS
The study lacks complete data on all the cases, but it also suggests that many infected children have no symptoms, which could allow them to spread the virus to others.


PA Media

Twitter bans Donald Trump’s presidential campaign over coronavirus fake news
Poppy Wood  
Thursday 6 August 2020 


Twitter last night banned Donald Trump’s presidential campaign from tweeting until it agreed to remove a video spouting fake news about coronavirus.

In the most sweeping action taken by the social media platform in its 14-year history, Twitter last night temporarily froze the President’s Team Trump campaign account after it was found to breach company policy about misinformation.

Read more: Donald Trump questions accuracy of South Korean coronavirus stats

Team Trump posted a video from a TV interview in which the President claimed children are “almost immune” from coronavirus.

In reality, initial research has shown that children spread the virus as easily as adults, while many have died from the disease.

A spokesperson for Twitter said the Team Trump tweet “is in violation of the Twitter Rules on Covid-19 misinformation”.

In the first action of its kind against the President, Facebook also removed the offending video from its platform.

A Facebook spokesperson said: “This video includes false claims that a group of people is immune from Covid-19 which is a violation of our policies around harmful Covid misinformation.”

It comes as both Twitter and Facebook have heavily censored claims about coronavirus that contradict advice from health authorities such as the World Health Organization (WHO) during the pandemic.

Both companies have argued that such posts require significant policing because they pose a clear risk of real-world harm.

However, the moves mark a turning point for the social media platforms, which have historically proven reluctant to censor content on their sites.

Read more: Twitter faces $250m fine after US data probe

Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg, who has repeatedly said he does not want Facebook to be the “arbiter of truth”, has recently had to grapple with wide-scale advertising boycotts over the platform’s content policy.

Twitter, meanwhile, has long been associated with the President, with many claiming Trump’s use of the platform proved vital for his presidential campaign success in 2016.
IG report: Turkey still aiding Islamic State

An Inspector General's report this week said that Turkey remains a hub for Islamic State activity in Syria and Iraq. Pictured, U.S. Army personnel and vehicles participate in Operation Inherent Resolve. Photo courtesy of U.S. Defense Department



Aug. 5 (UPI) -- Turkey, a NATO member, remains a regional transit hub for Islamic State terrorists, a Defense Department Inspector General's report says.
The 136-page quarterly report on the U.S. military's mission in Iraq and Syria cites the U.S. European Command calling Turkey a "major facilitation hub" for IS personnel, funding and weaponry.
EUCOM conceded, though, that Turkey has recently improved its efforts to stop the smuggling of fighters and material across the border Turkey shares with Iraq and Syria.



The territorial control of IS has been reduced in the two countries, but attacks increased in April, coinciding with the holy month of Ramadan. The report mentioned 405 ISIS attacks in Iraq during the quarter, with spikes during Ramadan. IS also took advantage of restrictions placed on U.S. troops due to the COVID-19 pandemic, it said.

It also referred to increasing pressure from Russia and the Syrian government of President Bashar al-Assad on the rebel Syrian Democratic Forces to break its affiliation with the United States.



"Since the October 2019 Turkish incursion into northeast Syria, the SDF has turned to Russia and the Syrian regime for protection against Turkish and Turkish-aligned forces," the report states.

A NATO country since 1952, Turkey has dismissed criticism of its recent actions, which include a violation of an arms embargo in Libya, claiming energy resources in the Mediterranean Sea, hostility toward Israel and the purchase of Russian-made air defense systems.
VIDEO
216-year-old sculpture damaged by tourist posing for photo

TOUCHE NON WAS IN ITALIAN

Aug. 5 (UPI) -- An Italian art museum said an Austrian tourist has apologized after damaging a 19th century sculpture while posing for a photo.

The Museo Antonio Canova in Possagno, Italy, shared security camera footage showing the man sitting on Antonio Canova's 216-year-old plaster sculpture of Pauline Borghese Bonaparte, Napoleon's sister, as Venus, the Roman goddess of love.

FOOT FETISHIST

The museum said a guard later discovered three of the sculpture's toes had been broken by the man.

The tourist was initially not identified, but the museum said he has now contacted officials to apologize after hearing about the damage from Austrian media. The man said he had been unaware of the damage he had caused.

"I apologize in every way," the man said in a message to the museum. Officials thanked the man for his apology and said he has offered to make amends for his actions.

Museum officials said they are working on a plan to repair the artwork. It was unclear whether the tourist would be fined.


Native American stone tool technology unearthed in Yemen, Oman

#CRYPTOARCHAEOLOGY  #FORTEAN #ANAMOLY 


Archaeologists recently unearthed 8,000-year-old evidence of fluted point technology in the Arabian Peninsula, a technology developed by Native Americans a few thousand years earlier. Photo by Jérémie Vosges/CNRS

Aug. 5 (UPI) -- Archaeologists recently discovered 8,000-year-old stone fluted points on the Arabian Peninsula, the same technology developed by Native Americans 13,000 years ago, according to a study published Wednesday in the journal PLOS One.

When the stone tools were first unearthed, researchers suspected there was something familiar about them. Scientists took note of the flute-like grooves texturing the sides of the stone points.

The tools examined for the study were found in Manayzah in Yemen and Ad-Dahariz in Oman, researchers said.

"We recognized this technique as ... probably the most famous of the prehistoric techniques used in the American continent," lead researcher Remy Crassard, head of archaeology at the French Center for Archaeology and Social Sciences, told UPI. "It took us little time to recognize it, but it took us more time to understand why fluting was present in Arabia."

For nearly a century, archaeologists have been uncovering evidence of fluted point technology at Native American sites dating between 10,000 and 13,000 years old.

Stone fluted points in the Americas are typically characterized by markings along the bases of spearpoints and blades. In Arabia, the fluting appeared closer to the tips of the ancient stone points.

Native Americans used hafting to more securely fix blades and points to handles and arrows. The people of the Arabian Peninsula used the same technique for a different purpose.

"In Arabia, they were using this same technique to create a flat zone on the back of the points, but as fluting comes from the tip most of the time, the hafting interpretation doesn't work," Crassard said.

"It must have been done for other reasons, and we tried to argue that it was more related to a form of 'bravado' or display of skill," Crassard said.

According to the paper's authors, the technologies are separated by too much time and space to have been the result of cultural exchange. Instead, the latest discovery is an example of cultural convergence.

"There are many examples [of cultural convergence] and from very diverse periods in human history," Crassard said.

"For example, polished stone axes are known from the Western European Neolithic, the Mayan culture of Central America and the 19-20th century tribes of Indonesia," Crassard said. "These three examples were never connected in time and space, but the objects produced and found by archaeologists are very similar."