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December 30, 2004
The Tsunami Disaster: A Perspective from Koodankulam
S. P. Udayakumar writes with pain and anguish at the non-performance of the government and the bureaucracy. I write this from the southern tip of India, a region that has always been known for its pristine beauty and tranquillity. No major wars have been fought on this soil, no disaster has stuck, nothing untoward has happened on a massive scale, at least to my knowledge, in the past five decades. The union government, state government, local government and all other government departments have let us down so callously. Although there was a golden gap of three hours between the underwater earthquake off of Sumatra and the tsunami attack on our coast, nobody gave an inkling of what was coming our way. Had there been at least a vague warning, it could have alerted and hence saved thousands of people. The officials of the Kalpakkam nuclear power station (that is located near Chennai) claimed first that they had switched off their only functioning reactor the moment they had heard about the earthquake near Indonesia. When people started asking uncomfortable questions about their not intimating this information to other government agencies, the Kalpakkam authorities modified their report saying that the reactor shut down “instantaneously” after sea water entered the plant premises. Some 65 people including 10 nuclear plant scientists are reported dead in the tsunami tragedy. The foundations dug for the upcoming Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR) plants are flooded and some construction workers killed. The DAE and the Indian government are building another nuclear power plant at Koodankulam (near the southernmost tip of India) that also sits on the Bay of Bengal badly affected by the tsunami. Neighboring coastal villages such as Idinthakarai, Kooduthazhai, Koothankuzhi, Uvari, Koottapuli have all been damaged by the tidal waves. If the Koodankulam nuclear power site is this vulnerable, should we go ahead with the construction of this mega-nuclear site? “Of course,” answers the DAE. Like all the nuclear departments around the world would do, the Indian nukedom also claims that they can take care of all these eventualities. SACCER (South Asian Community Center for Education and Research) Comments
hi there i fell really bad for what happend hope everyone gets found Posted by: sally on January 4, 2005 10:20 AMi thinkh sunami is a disaeter it svery bad for all the world many peoples die and many live with the remembers of your own Posted by: asjad on January 15, 2005 10:08 AMGood effort.But authentication will go along way to establish the credibility of the info you are giving.inadequacy rather than reluctance is the main problem.The people in government are having to do what they can at best, in many places and so this is the result.. are our general public aware of that?In tamil nadu the movies and kodampakkam rules rather than the universities... Posted by: Sankaranarayanan on March 8, 2005 03:23 AMThis blog is really an eye opener. I am doing a project on koodankulam nuclear power project and I found this blog mighty useful. Well, Is there something that students like me can do about this disaster-to-come? Posted by: prathibha on March 17, 2005 09:21 AMVery good site! I like it! Thanks! Posted by: Koshkitko on January 15, 2006 03:44 PMPost a comment
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