to leave the northern part of japan because it is not that there is immediate health concern but clearly they re worried about the uncertainty surrounding what is going on at the fukushima 1 plant and also the fact that you re dealing with a country that has three major crises all at once it is trying to deal with. the nuclear crisis alone is trouble enough, then you add to that a tsunami and an earthquake on top of it. and so tonight, britain is joining france and germany and several other countries in urging its citizens to leave tokyo and the north part of that country. and given your experience covering these kinds of environmental disasters, how would you rate the credibility of the various players and where would you point us in terms of paying attention for the highest credibility information coming out? well,รง i mean, look, you kn, i ll be honest with you.
and given your experience covering these kinds of environmental disasters, how would you rate the credibility of the various players and where would you point us in terms of paying attention for the highest credibility information coming out? well, i mean, look, you know, i ll be honest with you. i covered bp, the bp oil spill, and this whole situation the way it has unfolded reminded me an awful lot of the crisis in the gulf. at first, they are always telling you, you know, nothing s wrong, we ve got it under control. then day after day it becomes more and more clear that they don t have it under control. i mean, clearly if you don t have water in a spent fuel pool, that s a really big problem, and even just even tonight, the iaea released data about the temperatures in the spent fuel