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VOA常速英语:Troubles Mount at Quake-Stricken Japanese Nuclear Reactor
Workers at a nuclear plant in Japan are battling to prevent a meltdown in one of the reactors, following the massive earthquake that struck the north-east part of the country on Friday. The latest government figures figures put the death toll from the earthquake and tsunami at just under 2,000 - but that’s likely to increase dramatically n the coming days.
Amateur video footage, taken in a coastal town as the tsunami hit, reveals the full power of the tsunami in horrific detail.
Residents had just minutes to flee before the wall of water came ashore.
The town where the video was taken, Miniami Sanriku on the coast of Miyagi prefecture, is now flattened. Authorities say 10,000 of its residents are missing.
Japan has now dispatched 100,000 troops to the area and rescue teams from the U.S, New Zealand, China and other countries have arrived.
They are being greeted with scenes of utter devastation. The death toll is rising steadily; it will be weeks before it’s known how many people lie buried here, or how many were swept out to sea.
Reunions bring relief from the horror, but for many more families the search for loved ones continues.
The grim rescue efforts are taking place against the backdrop of a threatened nuclear disaster.
Workers at the Fukushima 1 nuclear power plant are battling to stabilize the reactors after a second explosion on Saturday.
Now, technicians are trying to avoid a meltdown in one of the three reactors by pouring in seawater. They say the fuel rods were almost completely exposed - raising fears of a further catastrophe.
All people within a 20-kilometer radius of the plant are being evacuated to other areas. The Japanese government is playing down fears of a nuclear disaster - but news reports say that a U.S. aircraft carrier in the area has been redeployed, after recording abnormally high levels of radiation 100 kilometers offshore.
Aftershocks continue to rock much of northern and eastern Japan - including the capital.
At six pm on a Monday evening, Tokyo's main train station is normally packed, as millions of commuters head to the suburbs.
It appears many workers have heeded the government’s call for people to stay home, in an effort to conserve energy.
For those who did venture out, the sense of fear following Friday's massive earthquake is still present. “It’s very scary. I’m scared of more earthquakes,” one person said.
“I was in my office on the 33rd floor when the earthquake struck on Friday. It swayed from side to side, everyone was so shocked,” said another.
The danger is not yet over.
Japan’s Meteorological Agency says there is a 70 percent chance of a magnitude 7 or stronger earthquake striking in the next three days.
In this huge urban area of 35-million inhabitants, there is a palpable nervousness over what the coming days may bring.
As Tokyo’s workers head home - it's likely their thoughts are also with the tens of thousands of people further north, whose homes and livelihoods have crumbled or been washed away.
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