What's new

Deadly blast near India nuclear plant

Nuclear technology and plants are not safe in the hands of the Indians. Put these nuclear plants immediately in the custody of the IAEA and take away India's nuclear weapons. :partay:
 
Nuclear technology and plants are not safe in the hands of the Indians. Put these nuclear plants immediately in the custody of the IAEA and take away India's nuclear weapons. :partay:

or shift the Nuclear plant to Indian Capital - New Delhi
 
Nuclear technology and plants are not safe in the hands of the Indians. Put these nuclear plants immediately in the custody of the IAEA and take away India's nuclear weapons. :partay:

What a dumb post by a PDF thinktank.

or shift the Nuclear plant to Indian Capital - New Delhi

Already there are nuclear plants near Mumbai and Chennai - two major cities. So not sure where are you going with it.

Rivalry among fishermen led to Idinthakarai explosions
None of the accused or killed associated with anti-Kudankulam struggle
The police have filed a case against three persons and a few more unnamed persons in connection with the country bomb blast at Tsunami Colony here on Tuesday night, which killed six persons, including two children.

In what appears to be an illegal explosives factory in the middle of a residential layout, a bomb disposal squad, which recovered two live bombs from the site on Tuesday night around 10 p.m. and one bomb on Wednesday morning, seized 7.25 kg of explosive materials. Investigations reveal 18 fishermen families from Kooththenkuzhi, who had recently migrated to Tsunami Colony in Idinthakarai following rivalry with another group, were making country bombs to eliminate their enemies.

None of the accused or killed was associated with the anti-Kudankulam Nuclear Power Project struggle. The deceased have been identified as X. Viyagappan (32), M. Valan (27) and S. Mahimai Rajan (31), all from Kooththenkuzhi, S. Subisha (10) and her younger brother S. Subison (2), from Tsunami Colony, and P. Pramila (35) of Idinthakarai.

The police have registered the case against the first deceased, his associates and those injured— Jesu Maria Soosai and Vijay, a polytechnic student — who was recently arrested for allegedly possessing country-made bombs and released on bail and a few more persons.

The bombs went off while being assembled at house number 317 in Tsunami Colony on Tuesday, destroying one house and badly damaged three adjacent houses.

The flying bricks and concrete pieces seriously injured S. Roselin living in the opposite house and killed her son Subison, who was in her lap. The flying junk material also killed Subisha and her friend Pramila.

Rivalry among fishermen led to Idinthakarai explosions - The Hindu
 
Last edited:
Nuclear technology and plants are not safe in the hands of the Indians. Put these nuclear plants immediately in the custody of the IAEA and take away India's nuclear weapons. :partay:

You Sir, are a friggin idiot and a troll. Shame on you for being a PDF Think tank and coming up with posts like this.
 
India shouldn’t buy what Japan is selling, Live Mint, 4 Nov 13,Materials of substandard quality have already been installed in Kudankulam plant, says former chairman of AERB Pankaj Mishra.

An obsession with nuclear power makes many political elites secretive, ruthless and delusional, even as their cherished projects threaten millions of people with disaster. But the egregious examples I have in mind here aren’t Iran, Pakistan and North Korea. They are Japan and India, two countries with democratic institutions.

Last week in the south Indian city of Pondicherry, I met a friend who had managed to penetrate the security lockdown around Kudankulam, the Russian-built nuclear power station in Tamil Nadu that began partial operations late last month despite strong protests from local villagers.
Kudankulum lies only a few miles away from a coastline that was ravaged by a tsunami in 2004. Opposition to the plant intensified after another intense earthquake and tsunami in March 2011 caused meltdowns at three nuclear reactors at the Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan.

Since then, Indian police have deported the few journalists who have tried to report on the protests, sequestered entire villages and levied criminal charges against tens of thousands of locals, some of whom have been accused of sedition and “waging war on the state.”

A new book, The Power of Promise: Examining Nuclear Energy in India by Princeton University physicist M.V. Ramana, takes a sober—and sobering—look at the fantasies and perils attached to this mirage, and finds the promise of nuclear energy empty in every way: environmental, economic and technological.

The more disturbing parts of Ramana’s book deal with the neglect of safety by the nuclear establishment. Recounting various alarming “incidents” in recent decades, he inspires little confidence in India’s ability to avoid a major disaster such as Chernobyl or Fukushima.

India’s nuclear industry not really safe – new book « nuclear-news
 
An obsession with nuclear power makes many political elites secretive, ruthless and delusional, even as their cherished projects threaten millions of people with disaster. But the egregious examples I have in mind here aren’t Iran, Pakistan and North Korea. They are Japan and India, two countries with democratic institutions.

The more disturbing parts of Ramana’s book deal with the neglect of safety by the nuclear establishment. Recounting various alarming “incidents” in recent decades, he inspires little confidence in India’s ability to avoid a major disaster such as Chernobyl or Fukushima.
You copy and pasted this 'report' to indicate the danger of nuclear reactors in India? How about talking about Pakistan too which has the fastest growing and most dangerous nuke industry in the world? Pakistan needs to dismantle all of this because of safety concerns before India does.
 
Some Indians here obviously do not have a sense of humour although there still remains a major and legitimate concern about the safety of Indian nuclear weapons and plants ....
 
Some Indians here obviously do not have a sense of humour although there still remains a major and legitimate concern about the safety of Indian nuclear weapons and plants ....

How is this in any way legitimate?
 
Had the bomb exploded near a nuclear plant in Pakistan that would be a legitimate concern???

It would be even less of a concern. There are explosions in Pakistan every day, that particular one would have been of no consequence.

The fact that these guys blew themselves up accidentally shows that they are all kinds of incompetent. There are manuals on the Internet about this kind of stuff.
 
Guys, for god sake stop trolling, this is a serious incident.

Rest in peace to all victims.
 
Rest in peace to the innocent dead people.
I hate cowards.
 
Nuclear technology and plants are not safe in the hands of the Indians. Put these nuclear plants immediately in the custody of the IAEA and take away India's nuclear weapons. :partay:
What a dumb post by a PDF thinktank.

This NP is out dated , its based on 1980s Soviet technology plus there are many unresolved issues pertaining to safety, environment and health. The Indian govt has no back up plans/resources/ safety measures for the inhabitants in case of a nuclear leakage.

if you know of any please share it here, thanks
 
What Some Holy Rollers tried to make a Bomb but in a failed attempt Killed their Family members ...


A new face of Foreign Funded Christian Terrorism ... Media is Quite for Obvious reason...
 
What Some Holy Rollers tried to make a Bomb but in a failed attempt Killed their Family members ...


A new face of Foreign Funded Christian Terrorism ... Media is Quite for Obvious reason...

agreed, must be Italian Christian Empress of India vendetta to liquidate Tamils using RAW and her Hindu stooges
 
Back
Top Bottom