Japan says it will continue to export nuclear power plants

Japan today said it would continue to export nuclear power plants after ensuring that the safety of the technology was of highest global standards, even as the country grapples with the crisis at its tsunami-hit Fukushima atomic unit.

The Japanese cabinet approved the sales despite uncertainty over Tokyo's own use of the atomic technology.

Prior to the March 11 devastating earthquake and tsunami that triggered a nuclear crisis in the country, Japan had been actively promoting exports of nuclear technology and had struck an accord last year to build nuclear plants in Vietnam.

India has also been in talks with Japan for importing Japanese nuclear

power plants to feed its ever mushrooming energy needs. Japan has also signed energy cooperation pacts with Russia, South Korea and Jordan.

In an official statement the Japanese government said, “in case other countries wish to utilise our nuclear power technology, we shall provide it by ensuring that its safety is of the highest global standards.”

Without naming any country, the statement said, “a number of countries continue to express interest in Japan's nuclear power technology.”

The statement said Japanese parliament would ratify nuclear accords with Jordan, Vietnam, Russia and South Korea.

The parliament is currently debating the pact.

zp8497586rq

G8 nations to take stock of development needs

TORONTO, June 25 (Reuters) – Rich countries came up short on fund-raising promises for poor nations and will meet on Friday to figure out how to direct aid resources at a time when their own budgets are squeezed.

The Group of Eight nations meet in Huntsville, Ontario, north of Toronto on Friday, having fallen an estimated $18 billion short of a 2005 pledge to raise their combined aid to the poorest countries by at least $50 billion.

The G8′s meeting in the sleepy lakeside community provides a respite from Toronto’s hectic urban pace and the difficult tasks that await the larger Group of 20 summit on Saturday and Sunday.

The United States, Britain, Canada, Japan, Italy, France, Germany and Russia make up the club of G8 members.

Although the G8 cannot avoid talking about its own economic troubles — namely the strength of the global recovery and the state of public finances — the smaller group wanted to carve out some time to discuss problems facing poor countries, G8 officials said.

Canada, host of the G8 and G20 meetings, wants to ensure that donor countries follow through on their commitments.

The hosts also want mother-and-child health and the rebuilding of Haiti from a devastating earthquake to be the focus, officials said. Haiti was invited to attend the G8 meeting along with Jamaica and some African countries.

The United States is pushing for more agricultural investment in Africa and has created a fund to boost food production in poorer countries.

<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

For full coverage [ID:nN18322198]

Factbox on austerity measures [ID:nLDE64Q1OF]

Timeline on the debt crisis [ID:nLDE65n0VR]

Graphic link.reuters.com/cew83m

Insider TV link.reuters.com/dux43m

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

The G8 will discuss progress toward meeting the eight U.N. Millennium Development Goals, or MDGs, on poverty by 2015. The group will also review the $18 billion shortfall in reaching the $50 billion total pledged in 2005 at the G8 summit in Gleneagles, Scotland.

The Gleneagles meeting also promised to provide an extra $25 billion a year for Africa as part of the overall $50 billion increase in financial assistance by 2010. Citing figures from the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, the World Bank said the G8 had provided just $11 billion of the $25 billion for Africa.

COUNTRIES URGED TO LIVE UP TO AID PLEDGE

In a report prepared before the summits, the World Bank urged rich countries to make good on their aid pledges, warning that poor countries were vulnerable to any setbacks in the global economic recovery.

It urged rich countries to secure the economic recovery, arguing that the resources of poor states were already overstrained by the last two years of the economic crisis, which has hit exports and worker remittances.

Development groups called on industrialized countries to renew their aid commitments from Gleneagles, arguing that rich countries should not be let off the hook when many African governments had kept their pledges to follow policies that promoted growth and tackled corruption.

“We’re asking them to make good on those pledges over the next two years,” said Mark Fried, policy coordinator for international development group Oxfam. “They need to set clear targets to come up with the money they missed,” he added.

Fried said African countries had lost an estimated $63 billion since the global financial crisis began in 2008 through lower export earnings from a collapse in demand and declines in foreign aid. (Reporting by Lesley Wroughton; Editing by Peter Cooney) (lesley.wroughton@thomsonreuters.com +1-202-898-8317; Reuters Messaging: lesley.wroughton.reuters.com@reuters.net))

Tibetans in-exile pay homage to victims of China earthquake

Dharamsala (Himachal Pradesh), May 19 (ANI): Tibetans in-exile held a candlelight vigil and offered special prayers in Himachal Pradesh”s Dharamsala city for their comrades, who died in the devastating earthquake that hit China on April 14.

They paid homage to the victims in a candlelight procession and finally gathered at the main Buddhist temple, Tsuglagkhang.

Buddhist Monks held prayer sessions for the rebirth of the victims and will continue to offer prayers for seven weeks, in keeping with tradition.

“Today is the fifth week of those who have died on April 14 during the earthquake. So we are showing our solidarity for them. Those who have lost their lives, we are offering prayers for their rebirth,” said Tsering Phungchok, Tibetan settlement officer.

The official death toll climbed to 2,046 people, with 193 still missing in the strong quake that toppled hundreds of homes and schools.

Meanwhile, the Dalai Lama has appealed to the Chinese Government to allow him to visit China for the first time in 51 years and see the quake zone in Qinghai province, where he was born. (ANI)

Tiny tot, grandma saved 123 hours after deadly China quake

Qinghai (China), Apr.20 (ANI): Rescuers in China’s Sichuan province have pulled out two survivors from the rubble of last week’s devastating earthquake.

A four-year-old girl and her 68-year-old grandmother, who had been trapped for about 123 hours, were miraculously retrieved from rubble in a village in earthquake hit Yushu prefecture.

The girl, Tsering Palkyi, suffered only minor injuries and has returned to her family, according to rescuers.

Her grandma, Urgyen Tsemon, has been kept under medical observation for potential life-threatening injuries.

“They were determined to stay alive,” Ao Dingqiang, a 40-year-old rescuer from Guang”an of Sichuan, told the China Daily.

The latest miracle came as rescuers stretched their efforts from Gyegu to reach remote villages in the mountainous plateau terrain.

Both survivors are from Xinzhai village, about 20 km east of Gyegu town and 3 km from the main road.

An eight-man team was involved in the rescue operation.

They used a hydraulic jack to lift the collapsed mud-brick wall and roll it down a slope to make enough room for the trapped villagers to get free. (ANI)

China quake toll mounts to 1,100, hopes for survivors fade

Beijing, Apr 17(ANI): The death toll from the devastating earthquake that struck a Tibetan area in northwest China’s Qinghai Province rose to 1,100 on Saturday morning, with another 417 remaining missing.

Wednesday’s earthquake that measured 7.1 on the Richter scale, is believed to be the strongest to hit the country in nearly two years, and has left 11,744 people injured, including 1,192 serious cases.

Rescuers said that the toll is expected to rise as freezing nights, with temperatures around minus three degrees C, become increasingly difficult for survivors under the debris to bear.

Altitude sickness and low oxygen have already caused tremendous challenges for rescuers, volunteers and reporters alike, The China Daily reports.

The quake and a string of aftershocks, the biggest being 6.3 magnitude, toppled houses, temples, gas stations and electric poles, triggered landslides, damaged roads, cut power supplies and disrupted telecommunications. A reservoir also developed cracks, which workers are trying to patch.

Chinese President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao have ordered local authorities to spare no effort in search and rescue operations, and in the caring of the victims.

According to the Qinghai provincial government, over 5,000 rescuers, including soldiers and medical workers, are at the quake-hit region,

Authorities in the neighboring provinces of Gansu and Sichuan and the Tibet autonomous region are also involved in the rescue efforts. (ANI)

PM Singh meets Chinese Prez, discusses bilateral issues

Brazil, April 16(ANI): Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh called on Chinese President Hu Jintao at Brasilia, the capital of Brazil on Thursday. With their advisers and official delegations, the leaders of the two neighbouring giants discussed a wide range of bilateral issues, particularly concerning trade and investment.

Indian PM also conveyed India’s sorrow over the death of 617 people in the devastating earthquake that struck northwestern parts of China on Wednesday.

Chile’s power grid unstable for a week: president

(Reuters) – Chile’s main power grid will remain “unstable” for the next seven days, President Sebastian Pinera said on Monday, a day after a massive outage left most the world’s top copper producer in the dark.

World | Natural Disasters

Millions of Chileans were left without power on Sunday evening after a transformer failed in the electricity grid, two weeks after a devastating earthquake killed hundreds and mangled roads and bridges in the South American country.

“We’re committed to repair the damaged transformer within the next 48 hours and the lines that may have been affected should be checked and repaired within the next seven days,” Pinera said.

“As it was the case following the earthquake on February 27, in the next seven days we’re going to have an unstable power system,” he added.

Electricity was gradually restored on Sunday evening, but the failure of the South American country’s main power grid is another test for conservative Pinera, who took office last week on pledges to rebuild Chile after the huge earthquake, which caused an estimated $20 billion to $30 billion in damage.

(Reporting by Antonio de la Jara; Writing by Eduardo Garcia; Editing by Jackie Frank)

Quake rocks residents

New South Wales coastal residents were fearing the worst this morning as an earthquake hit off the coast, with the epicentre just off Nelson Bay.

The quake, at 3:30am (AEDT), prompted panicked residents to call police.

Ida from Fingal Bay at Port Stephens says the effects of the quake were similar to the devastating Newcastle earthquake in 1989.

“The whole house shook. It woke us up but we realised straight away what it was because we’d experienced the same thing in the Newcastle earthquake,” she said.

Tea Gardens’ resident Graham was also concerned.

“It was so quiet and then all of a sudden there was a slight rumble followed … 10 seconds later by the house shaking,” he said.

Bulahdelah resident Allen Osbourne says the quake came as a shock.

“The house shuddered twice, I was listening to the radio and my son was still up because he’s a bit of a night owl, and he came out and said, ‘that wasn’t an earthquake was it?’ I said, I think it was, definitely,” he said.

The director of the Australian Seismological Centre, Kevin McCue, says its shock waves radiated along the eastern seaboard.

“Definitely an earthquake. It was recorded throughout south-eastern Australia right down as far as Melbourne,” he said.

“About magnitude three-and-a-half, perhaps even a little bit larger and the epicentre is just off Seal Rocks, perhaps 10 or 20 kilometres out off the coast.”

Mr McCue says the quake is indirectly linked to last month’s devastating earthquake in Chile.

“That was a great earthquake … it ruptured about a 700 kilometre long length along the fault boundary there and you can’t do that without moving the ‘stressors’ throughout the Pacific plate, but we’re around about, well Newcastle is around 2,000 kilometres to the west of the Pacific plate boundary, so it’s a very indirect relationship but certainly not unrelated,” he said.

Aftershock hits Chile as new president sworn in

The swearing-in ceremony of Chile’s new president, Sebastian Pinera, has been overshadowed by the strongest aftershock since last month’s devastating earthquake.

Mr Pinera was inaugurated in an understated ceremony in the city of Valparaiso just 115 kilometres north of where a 6.9-magnitude aftershock rocked the country moments earlier.

The aftershocks caused panic at the parliament. Many guests, including foreign dignitaries, were visibly shaken, and the parliament was urgently evacuated afterwards. A tsunami alert was issued but later withdrawn.

Mr Pinera said one of the aftershocks had caused “significant damage” to the central city of Rancagua.

It marks a dramatic start for the conservative president, who has committed himself to rebuilding the country after last month’s devastating earthquake.

The centre-right billionaire says his will be the government “not of the earthquake, but of the reconstruction”.

The largest aftershock was a peak in a wave of more than 200 which have shaken the South American nation since the massive 8.8-quake of February 27, which sparked a killer tsunami and left almost 500 confirmed dead.

Mr Pinera inherited the presidential reins from wildly popular left-wing leader Michelle Bachelet and is now left facing the huge challenge of rebuilding the nation.

He later waved from an open-topped car to those who had not fled the area to higher ground in case of a tsunami, after the alert was issued along more than 400 kilometres of nearby coastline.

The National Emergency Office, sharply criticised for its slow reaction to February’s deadly quake, swiftly issued the alert for central areas of Chile, although the Haiwaii-based Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre said there was no threat of a “destructive widespread tsunami.”

No damage or injured were immediately reported after the quakes, which were felt in neighbouring Argentina and even registered as far away as Hong Kong.

Mr Pinera’s first task as president was to be a visit to the ravaged coastal town of Constitucion, one of the worst hit by last month’s quake and the giant waves that followed, that left some 2 million people homeless.

His January victory spelled an end to the ruling left-wing coalition that has governed Chile since the end of General Pinochet’s dictatorship 20 years ago.

But his presidency will be marked by the aftermath of the quakes.

“We won’t be the government of the earthquake, we’ll be the government of reconstruction,” Mr Pinera said recently.

Brain function of earthquake survivors gets acutely affected

Washington, Sep 1 (ANI): The earthquake that jolted Wenchuan, China, in 2008 has had an acute impact on the brain function of physically healthy survivors, and even poses a risk to their mental health, according a new research.

Working with collaborators from universities in China, the US and Liverpool, researchers at the Institute of Psychiatry focussed on the survivors of the earthquake that occurred on May 12 last year.

The researchers wanted to gain a better understanding of how functional brain systems adapt to severe emotional stress.

Previous animal studies have demonstrated the importance of limbic, paralimbic, striatal, and prefrontal structures of the brain in stress and fear responses.

Human studies, which have focused primarily on patients with clinically established posttraumatic stress disorders, have reported abnormalities in similar brain structures.

But not much is known about potential alterations of brain function in trauma survivors shortly after traumatic events such as an earthquake.

The epicentre of the devastating earthquake was in Wenchuan, in the Sichuan Province of China.

The tremor measured 8.0 on the Richter scale and severely affected many geographical regions including Yingxiu, Wenchuan, Dujiangyan, and Shifang, where 45 million people were directly affected.

The researchers found that a significant proportion of the survivors (around 20 per cent) are likely to develop stress-related disorders, such as acute stress disorder (ASD) and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

“Given the serious and persistent impact of these highly prevalent psychiatric disorders, it is vital to develop a better understanding of the alterations of cerebral function evident in the early stages of adaptation to trauma. Such knowledge may lead to a better understanding of posttraumatic responses and the development of more effective early interventions,” said Dr Andrea Mechelli from the Institute of Psychiatry at King’s College London.

The researchers used a method known as ‘resting-state fMRI’ to examine 44 healthy survivors and 32 controls shortly after the massive psychological trauma.

They found that significant alterations in brain function similar to those observed in posttraumatic stress disorders could be seen shortly after major traumatic experiences, highlighting the need for early evaluation and intervention for the survivors.

The results of the study show that individuals experiencing severe emotional trauma showed hyperactivity in certain areas of the brain, and decreased functional connectivity in others, shortly after the massively traumatic Wenchuan earthquake.

Particularly, the findings indicated that traumatic experiences affect not only regional function but also dynamic interactions within brain networks.

It is not clear if this pattern of brain alteration remains the same or evolves further over the following weeks or months after the traumatic experiences.

“A better understanding of the impact of traumatic events on brain function may help us identify those in need of early treatment and reduce the long-term psychological impact in trauma survivors of national disasters, military conflict, and other causes of severe emotional distress,” said Mechelli.

The results of the study have been published in PNAS online. (ANI)

Officially 5,335 students killed in Chinese quake

New Delhi, May 7 (ANI): A total of 5,335 students were dead or missing from China’s May 12 earthquake last year, said authorities with the civil affairs department of the provincial government.

This is the first official tally of students killed in the devastating earthquake, Xinhua reported
The death toll from China’s May 12 earthquake last year in Sichuan Province remains at 68,712.

Another 17,921 people in Sichuan were missing after the disaster, said Huang Mingquan, head of the civil affairs department. (ANI)

How some historical events shape our memory

Washington, Apr 24 (ANI): We live in history. That’s what psychologists from University of Alberta believe, who have found that some of the historical public events play a crucial role in shaping our memory.

The experiment included participants from ten cities around the world and was conducted in two parts.

At first, the participants were shown a list of words and had to write down personal memories associated with those words (e.g., when they learned to ride a bike or when they were by a river).

In the second part, they thought aloud as they remembered when those personal events occurred. The participants were tape-recorded during this part of the experiment and the researchers analyzed the recordings to see how often public events were mentioned.

The results showed that “historically-defined autobiographical periods” (H-DAPs; e.g., “during the war”) do exist, although H-DAP formation depends on the intensity, duration, and novelty of the public event, as well as how close it is to a population.

The researchers found that Bosnians often referred to the civil war and Izmit Turks frequently mentioned the devastating earthquake, which struck Turkey in 1999.

Participants from Canada and Denmark, relatively conflict-free countries, almost never mentioned public events when describing their memories.

However, the Israeli participants did not use H-DAP references to date their memories.

The researchers said “this lack of H-DAPs reflects the chronic nature of the conflict that afflicts the region.”

“In Israel, group conflict is a fact of life, and psychological, social, and physical responses to this fact are part of the daily routine.”

The authors speculate that the 9/11 references were missing from the US samples because the attacks had, at most, a limited effect on the lives of most American.

These findings suggest that public events can be categorized as “emotionally charged” (e.g., the September 11 attacks), which affect people’s emotions, attitudes, and beliefs or “epoch-defining” (e.g., the Siege of Sarajevo), which change the way people live.

The study indicates personal memory and history become entwined, leading to the formation of H-DAPs and causing us to “live-in-history.” (ANI)

Pope Benedict XVI spends 82nd birthday resting

Castel Gandolfo, Italy – Following a week of intense Easter festivities, Pope Benedict XVI was set Thursday to spend his 82nd birthday resting at the papal residence of Castel Gandolfo in the hills south of Rome.

The low-key commemoration contrasted with April 16, 2008 when Benedict, who was on an apostolic visit to the US, was feted in Washington by then US president George W Bush.

On that occasion a choir sang “Happy Birthday” for the pontiff on the White House lawn.

In March this year Benedict made his first trip to Africa as pontiff when he visited Cameroon and Angola, while his next trip abroad is scheduled in May when he will travel to Jordan, Israel and the Palestinian Territories.

Before then, he is expected to visit Italy’s central Abruzzo region which last week was struck by a devastating earthquake in which almost 300 people were killed.

Unlike many other monarchies, Vatican City state does not officially celebrate birthdays of popes but holds public holidays to mark the anniversary of their election.

Benedict who took that name following his election on April 19, 2005, was born as Joseph Ratzinger in the town of Marktl am Inn, Bavaria, Germany.(dpa)

EU official: 500 million euros in EU aid for Italy earthquake

Rome – Some half-a-billion euros (665 million dollars) in European Union funds could be made available to help reconstruction efforts in Italy following last week’s devastating earthquake, a top EU official said Wednesday.

European Commission Vice President Antonio Tajani said the Italian government had 10 weeks by which it would have to apply for the money.

Almost 300 people were killed and around 35,000 left homeless in the earthquake which struck the central Abruzzo region on April 6.

Italy would be able to tap into a “solidarity fund” made available to the EU’s 27 member nations in the event of natural disasters, Tajani said in an interview with private television station Canale 5.

“Moreover some structural funds destined for Abruzzo and Italy can be re-allocated, and thus I think without exaggerating that a sum of 500 million euros can be reached,” Tajani said.

The Italian government estimates that some 12 billion euros are needed to reconstruct housing and other buildings in areas badly damaged by the earthquake, including L’Aquila a city of around 72,000 inhabitants.

Recent low temperatures and rain have made life even more uncomfortable for thousands of people who have been staying in tent shelters since abandoning their damaged homes. (dpa)

Pope calls for Israel-Palestinian peace at Easter

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) – Pope Benedict called in his Easter message on Sunday for a renewed push for Israeli-Palestinian peace just weeks before he travels to the Holy Land for the first time as pontiff.

The pope also sent greetings to survivors of Italy’s devastating earthquake and urged all those fearful for their futures, for whatever reason, not to lose hope.

“At a time of world food shortage, of financial turmoil, of old and new forms of poverty … it is urgent to rediscover grounds for hope,” said the pontiff, wearing cream and gold-colored vestments.

The pope celebrated an Easter Mass for tens of thousands of people gathered in St Peter’s Square as Christians around the world commemorated Jesus Christ’s resurrection.

At the morning Mass, the pope told the faithful the resurrection was a “cry of victory that unites us all today.”

Then, in his twice-yearly “Urbi et Orbi” (to the city and the world) address, the pope said he would carry a message of reconciliation on his May 8-15 trip to the Holy Land.

“Reconciliation — difficult, but indispensable — is a precondition for a future of overall security and peaceful coexistence,” the pope said.

“It can only be achieved through renewed, persevering and sincere efforts to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.”

The pope’s comments came the same day that Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas telephoned Benjamin Netanyahu for the first since he became Israel’s prime minister. Abbas said both sides needed to advance peace efforts, Israeli officials said.

The German pope, who turns 82 this month, will visit the Jordanian capital Amman before going to Jerusalem as well as to Nazareth and Bethlehem.

It will be the first trip by a pope to the Holy Land since Pope John Paul visited in 2000 and, at Jerusalem’s Western Wall, asked God forgiveness for offences by Christians against Jews over the centuries.

It follows the worst crisis in Catholic-Jewish relations in half a century after Benedict lifted the excommunication of British Bishop Richard Williamson, who said in January no more than 300,000 Jews perished in Nazi concentration camps, rather than the six million figure widely accepted by historians.

Williamson also said he did not believe there had been any gas chambers at the concentration camps.

The Easter celebrations at the Vatican took place at a time when many Italians have shifted their attention to victims of Monday’s devastating earthquake, which killed at least 294 people in the nearby Abruzzo region.

The pope, who plans to visit the disaster zone soon, sent out a special greeting to those affected by the quake, Italy’s worst in three decades.

He urged them to have “the courage necessary to move ahead together building a future open to hope.”

The earthquake made nearly 40,000 people homeless, thousands of whom celebrated Easter in tent cities.

(Reporting by Phil Stewart; Editing by Sophie Hares

Italy earthquake toll at 294 as rescue efforts end

L’Aquila, Italy – Almost a week after a devastating earthquake hit central Italy, authorities on Sunday terminated the search for survivors with the death toll standing at 294. A
59-year-old man who died in hospital late Saturday was the latest victim of the earthquake that struck the Abruzzo region on Monday.

By Sunday morning all missing people were accounted for, but officials said they could not exclude the possibility of more being found under rubble in the city of L’Aquila and other badly damaged towns.

A 20-year-old woman rescued on Wednesday was the last person to be pulled alive from wreckage.

On Sunday, with Easter being celebrated in many parts of the world including Italy, thousands of people made homeless by the quake attended mass services at makeshift chapels erected at several tent camp shelters.

“It’s Easter for us too, despite the tragedy and the rubble of the earthquake,” L’Aquila Archbishop Giuseppe Molinari told hundreds of faithful gathered for mass under a plastic tent at the main homeless camp outside the devastated city center.

“The resurrection of Christ is also the resurrection of L’Aquila,” he said.

The camps are providing shelter for some 17,000 people, most of whom abandoned their homes shortly after the earthquake which registered a magnitude of 6.2, struck in the early hours of Monday.

Prosecutors say they are investigating why so many modern buildings were flattened by the earthquake, amid allegations that safe construction procedures were ignored in an area known for its high seismic risk.

China publishes national human rights action plan

Beijing, Apr.13 (ANI): “China has a long road ahead in its efforts to improve its human rights situation,” though unremitting efforts have been made to promote and safeguard human rights since the founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949, which “fundamentally” changed the fate of the Chinese people.

The country published its first working plan on human rights protection Monday, pledging to further protect and improve the country’s human rights conditions in an all-round way.

The National Human Rights Action Plan of China (2009-2010), issued by the Information Office of the State Council, or Cabinet, highlighted various human rights that would be promoted and protected in less than two years, from people’s right to work, to the rights of detainees and the disabled, Xinhua reports.

The death penalty will be “strictly controlled and prudently applied,” “impartial and fair trials” of litigants will be guaranteed, and the people will enjoy more rights to be informed and to be heard, the government promised.

More job opportunities will be created, per capita income will be increased, social security network will be broadened, and health care and education will become more accessible and affordable in order to guarantee the people’s economic, social and cultural rights.

The document also detailed how the government will do to “guarantee human rights in the reconstruction of areas hit by the devastating earthquake in Wenchuan, Sichuan Province” on May 12, 2008, in which about 87,000 people were confirmed dead or missing, more than 370,000 were injured, and at least 15 million people were displaced.

It says that by the year 2010, the registered urban unemployment rate will be kept below 5 percent, according to the human rights action plan.

The government is to reduce the number of deaths caused by industrial accidents per 100 million yuan (US$14.3 million) of GDP by 35 percent compared with the figure for 2005, and the deaths per 100,000 workers in factories, mines and businesses by 25 percent, according to the plan.

It said that those goals will be realized by strengthening labor protection, and improving production conditions in accordance with the Law on Safe Production. (ANI)

Pope Benedict XVI leads Easter vigil

Vatican City – Pope Benedict XVI led the traditional Easter vigil late Saturday, entering a darkened St Peter’s Basilica while carrying a tall candle – a gesture symbolizing the Christian belief in the resurrected Jesus’ illuminating presence in the world. Taking their cue from the 81-year-old pontiff, thousands of faithful gathered inside lit their own candles, the flames flickering inside the church’s immense interior.

Outside, on a mild, spring night in Rome, tens of thousands more followed the ceremony from four giant screens erected on St Peter’s Square.

During the ceremony Benedict also administered the sacraments of baptism, confirmation and first communion to five converts – three women and two men – including nationals from China, Italy and the US.

In his homily Benedict said that through Jesus’ resurrection mankind can hope for eternal life, but that this is something that can only be achieved by first experiencing death.

“The Easter candle burns, and is thereby consumed: Cross and resurrection are inseperable,” the pontiff said referring to Jesus’ crucifixion.

“From the cross, from the son’s self-giving, light is born, true radiance comes into the world,” Benedict said.

This year’s Easter festivities in Italy have been tinged with sorrow for the victims of a devastating earthquake that struck the country’s central Abruzzo region on Monday.

By Saturday the death toll stood at 291, including at least 20 children.

During a Friday evening Way-of-the-Cross procession over which he presided, Benedict renewed his condolences for the dead, offering prayers that their souls may rest in peace.

Earlier in the week, the German-born pontiff said he planned to visit the region hit by the tremor “as soon as possible.”

Some 17,000 people evacuated from L’Aquila and other badly damaged towns have spent their nights in several tent shelters set up by authorities.

Benedict has donated 500 chocolate Easter eggs to be distributed to children staying in the tent shelters, the Vatican said.

Benedict is scheduled to celebrate Easter Mass on Sunday in St Peter’s Square. He will also impart his traditional Urbi et Orbi “to the city and to the world” blessing and message. (dpa)

Hopes dim in Italian search for quake survivor

Search for possible survivor of Monday’s quake

* Rescue efforts winding down

* Death toll rises to 291; around 40,000 homeless

By Silvia Aloisi

L’AQUILA, Italy, April 11 (Reuters) – Rescue workers searched on Saturday for what could be the last survivor of Italy’s devastating earthquake but said there was no guarantee anyone was left alive under the rubble.

A day after Italians held a state funeral for the victims of Monday’s quake, the death toll rose to 291 after more bodies were pulled from the debris. Nearly 40,000 people were made homeless.

Sniffer dogs picked up a human scent late on Friday coming from beneath the ruins of what was a four-storey building in L’Aquila, the medieval mountain city hardest hit by the 6.3 magnitude quake. Rescue workers also heard noises.

But it went quiet overnight and officials say dogs could have responded to the scent of a corpse, or even just human blood. At least nine bodies have already been pulled from that site, firemen said.

“We dug all night and now we just have to wait. We can hear almost nothing now,” a rescue worker told Reuters.

Still, on the sixth day after the quake, hopes are fading of finding people alive. The latest survivor to be rescued, a 20-year-old woman, was pulled from the rubble on Tuesday.

The Civil Protection Agency has signalled that the search is almost over and many officials expect the agency to wind up rescue operations on Sunday. Violent aftershocks continued to shake the Abruzzo region overnight and into the morning, further terrifying survivors, many of whom prepared to celebrate Easter homeless.

Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi estimated that almost 24,000 of the homeless were living in emergency camps and 15,000 had been given shelter in hotels or private homes.

Berlusconi, a billionaire media mogul, has offered to put up the homeless at three of his own properties.

“I will do what I can too, by offering some of my houses,” said the 72-year-old prime minister, Italy’s second richest man. Attention is now starting to turn to the reconstruction of a region that relies on tourism, farming and family firms. More than half the companies in the Abruzzo region are out of action.

One estimate put the damage at up to 3 billion euros ($4 billion), but its impact on Italy’s economy, which is worth nearly 2 trillion euros a year and is already mired in recession, is expected to be limited.

The government has also announced an inquiry after President Giorgio Napolitano said shoddy construction may be behind the collapse of modern buildings that should have been quake-proof. (Writing by Phil Stewart)