Some progress at Japan reactors, disaster toll rises

TOKYO, (Reuters) – Japan hoped power lines restored  to its stricken nuclear plant may help solve the world’s worst  atomic crisis in 25 years, triggered by an earthquake and  tsunami that also left more than 21,000 people dead or missing.

The Asian nation’s people are in shock at both the ongoing  battle to avert deadly radiation at the six-reactor Fukushima  plant and a still-rising death toll from the March 11 disaster.

The world’s third largest economy has suffered an estimated  $250 billion of damage with entire towns in the northeast  obliterated in Japan’s darkest moment since World War Two. Tokyo’s markets are closed for a holiday today.

Elsewhere, investors will be weighing risks to the  global economy from Japan’s multiple crisis, along with conflict  in Libya and other unrest in the Arab world.

Easing Japan’s gloom briefly, local TV showed one moving  survival tale: an 80-year-old woman and her 16-year-old grandson  rescued from their damaged home after nine days.

At Fukushima, around 300 engineers were working  round-the-clock inside an evacuation zone to contain the worst  nuclear accident since Chernobyl, Ukraine, in 1986.

They have been spraying the coastal complex with sea-water so  fuel rods will not overheat and emit radiation. Hopes for a more  permanent solution depend on connecting electricity cables to  reactivate on-site water pumps at each of the reactors.

“There have been some positive developments in the last  24 hours but overall the situation remains very serious,” said  Graham Andrew, a senior official of Vienna-based U.N. watchdog  the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

Working in suits sealed by duct tape, engineers have  managed to re-establish power cables to the No. 1, 2, 5 and 6  reactors and plan to start testing systems soon, officials say.

If the pumps cannot restart, drastic and lengthy measures  may be needed like burying the plant in sand and concrete.

Even if the situation is contained, cases of contaminated  vegetables, dust, milk and water are already stoking anxiety  despite Japanese officials’ assurances levels are not dangerous.

The government prohibited the sale of raw milk from  Fukushima prefecture and spinach from another nearby area. It  said more restrictions on food may be announced later today.

The health ministry asked residents of one village about 40  km (25 miles) from the plant to stop drinking tap water after  levels of radioactive iodine three times above the regulated  limit were found, Kyodo news agency said.

Much smaller traces of radioactive iodine have also been  found in Tokyo,  240 km (150 miles) south of the plant.

“The contamination of food and water is a concern,”  said another IAEA official, Gerhard Proehl. Some expatriates and local residents have left the  capital which is normally home to 13 million people, about a  tenth of the population. Those who remain are subdued but not  panicked.  “There’s no way I can check if those radioactive particles  are in my tap water or the food I eat, so there isn’t much I can  really do about it,” said Setsuko Kuroi, an 87-year-old woman  shopping in a supermarket with a white gauze mask over her face.

AID TRICKLE

Official tolls of dead and missing are rising steadily — to  8,450 and 12,931 respectively on Monday. They could jump dramatically since police said they believed  more than 15,000 people had been killed in Miyagi prefecture,  one of four that took the brunt of the tsunami.

Scores of nations have pledged aid to victims, but little is  visible in many devastated towns and villages.

“All we have had is the clothes on our backs. But they are  good enough. They’ve kept us warm through all of this,” said  Machiko Kawahata as she, her daughter and granddaughter looked  for clothes at a drop-off point in Kamaishi, a coastal town.

“We will make do and we will make it through this.”

The 9.0-magnitude quake and ensuing 10-metre high tsunami  made more than 350,000 people homeless.

Food, water, medicine and fuel are short in some parts, and  low temperatures during Japan’s winter are not helping.

While Japanese have been focused on the rescue operation  rather than recriminations, media and others have raised  questions over the government and plant operator Tokyo  Electric Power Company’s (TEPCO) performance.