Hundreds gathered at an anti-nuclear rally in Taiwan today to demand the government keep its pledge to abolish the use of atomic energy by 2025.
Waving placards reading “nuclear go zero,” and “abolish nuclear, save Taiwan,” protesters rallied outside the presidential office in Taipei on the same day as Japan marked the seventh anniversary of the Fukushima disaster.
Protesters were worried by a recent decision by the cabinet-level Atomic Energy Council to allow state-owned energy company Taipower to restart a reactor at a facility near Taipei, pending parliament's final approval.
The reactor has been offline since May 2016 after a glitch was found in its electrical system, which the company said has since been resolved.
Anti-nuclear groups are now questioning whether President Tsai Ing-wen's Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) will keep its promise to phase out nuclear energy.
An elderly woman in China on Saturday vandalised the stall of a fortune teller who wrongly predicted her death, according to a media report. The fortune-teller told the 70-year-old womanin Mianyang in southwestern Sichuan province in March last year that she would not live to see 2018...
Registration of labourers of unorganised sector will be carried out by conducting a campaign from April 01 to May 31 in the State. Chief Minister Shivaj Singh Chouhan announced this while holding dialogues with the people of the State during the programme ‘Dil Se’ relayed by the Akashwani on Sunday...