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Exploding toilet injures policeman

OTAKI, Chiba -- A police officer here got a little more flame than he was expecting when he flicked on his lighter in a police box men's room early Friday and an explosion opened a seven square meter hole in the ceiling.

The 51-year-old officer was sent to hospital with minor burns on his face and hands.

According to police, there were no explosive materials in the washroom, and when another officer came running after hearing the blast he found a 1.5 meter pillar of flame spewing from the drain in the floor. It's thought the washroom was filled with gas from a natural gas pocket that had leaked into the drain pipe. Investigators are now searching for the source of the gas.

Otaki is in the center of the Boso Peninsula, the location of the first natural gas well in Japan, drilled in 1891. According to the prefecture, the peninsula is in the center of the southern Kanto gas fields -- the broadest in the country by area and producing the second highest volume of gas, at about 463.22 million cubic meters per year (as of 2008). Kanto Natural Gas Development Co., which developed the fields, says that the gas is 99 percent methane, which is odorless.

The region has seen a number of explosions believed to have been caused by natural gas since 1988, including the July 2004 explosion of a museum in the town of Kujukuri in which an employee died and one other person was injured.

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Afghanistan orders news censorship ahead of election | guardian.co.uk

Afghanistan has ordered all journalists not to report incidents of violence during tomorrow's presidential election amid fears that such coverage will deter people from voting.

Two decrees were issued, one from the foreign ministry banning all broadcasts of information about violence while polls were open, and the other from the interior ministry requiring reporters to keep away from the scene of any attacks.

Although the English version of the foreign ministry's decree spoke of a "request", the version in Dari, one of Afghanistan's official languages, said reporting on violence during the election would be "strictly forbidden".

"We have taken this decision in the national interest of Afghanistan in order to encourage people and raise their morale to come out and vote," Siamak Herawi, a spokesman for President Hamid Karzai, told Reuters.

"This decision will control the negative impact of the media. If something happens, this will prevent them from exaggerating it, so that people will not be frightened to come out and vote."

It was unclear how the government intended to enforce the ban and Rachel Reid, the Afghanistan researcher for Human Rights Watch, said freedom of expression is enshrined in the Afghan constitution. The head of the Afghan Independent Journalists' Association (AIJA) said the decrees would not stop Afghan and foreign journalists from providing information to the public during the crucial election period.

"It shows the weakness of the government and we condemn such moves to deprive people from accessing news," Rahimullah Samander said.

Taliban militants have vowed to disrupt the election and authorities fear reports of violence on election day could intimidate those wanting to vote and damage the credibility of any result.

A suicide car bomber killed eight people and wounded more than 50 in Kabul yesterday, one of several attacks countrywide. Dozens of journalists were on the scene within minutes of the blast. The Taliban leader, Mullah Omar, has called on Afghans to boycott the vote and one commander has reportedly warned villagers in the south where the Taliban are strongest that voters found with indelible ink would have their fingers cut off.

Young people in Kabul say how they would change their country if they were president Link to this video

The US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, said the surge in violence from the Taliban reflected a deliberate campaign to intimidate voters ahead of the election. Clinton told reporters at the state department yesterday that the Taliban hope their attacks will create a climate of fear that will keep people away from the ballot boxes.

 

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Hamid Karzai pulls out of historic TV debate just hours before broadcast | The Guardian

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Rampaging toilet terrorizes children - Boing Boing

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