Japanese admit nuclear failures

Tsunami waves hits Fukushima Daiichi power plant (11 March)This image shows the first waters of the tsunami breaching the Fukushima power plant’s buildings

Japan has more than doubled its estimate of radiation that escaped from the tsunami-hit Fukushima nuclear plant in the first week after the disaster.

Japan’s nuclear safety agency also said meltdowns took place in three reactors more quickly than earlier believed.

The assessment comes as an expert panel begins an inquiry into the crisis.

The plant’s operator is hoping to shut down the facility by January, although there is concern it may take longer; the plant is still leaking radiation.

The 11 March earthquake and the tsunami it generated are now known to have killed more than 15,350 people, while nearly 8,200 remain unaccounted for.

Japan’s Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (Nisa) now says 770,000 terabecquerels escaped into the atmosphere – more than double its earlier estimate of 370,000 terabecquerels.

Although the amount is just 15% of the total released at Chernobyl in Ukraine in 1986 – the world’s worst nuclear disaster – it suggests the contamination of the area around the plant is worse than first thought, says the BBC’s Roland Buerk in Tokyo.

The safety agency also says that in reactor No 1, molten nuclear fuel dropped to the bottom of the pressure vessel within five hours of the earthquake – 10 hours earlier than initially estimated by operator Tepco.

Nisa also says a meltdown damaged the No 2 reactor after 80 hours, and the No 3 reactor 79 hours after the tsunami knocked out the plant’s cooling systems.

The revision, nearly three months into the crisis, is likely to increase criticism in Japan that the plant’s operator and the government were too slow to release information, our correspondent says.

Meanwhile, Japan’s Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano has said more evacuations are being considered.

Going within 20km of the Fukushima plant is forbidden by law, with some towns further away also affected.

But monitoring shows the lie of the land and wind patterns may be causing a build-up of radiation in other areas too.

The findings were released as an independent 10-member expert panel begins an investigation into the causes of the nuclear accident.

An investigation by the UN’s nuclear watchdog, the IAEA, has already pointed out a key failure – admitted by Japan – to plan for the risk of waves crashing over the sea wall and knocking out the plant’s back-up generators.

Even though a major faultline lies just offshore, the sea wall at Fukushima was less than 6m (20ft) high. The height of the tsunami wave was about 14m.

In its draft report, the IAEA said continued monitoring of the health and safety of the nuclear workers and the general public was necessary.

The report also emphasised the importance of independent regulators in the nuclear industry.

In Japan, the nuclear safety agency is part of the industry ministry, which promotes nuclear power.

A draft report obtained by Japanese broadcaster NHK – to be submitted to the IAEA Ministerial Conference on Nuclear Safety later this month – outlines plans to split the two bodies.

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Croatia nears EU finishing line

Croatian Foreign Minister Gordan Jandrokovic (left) with EU Enlargement Commissioner Stefan Fuele, 19 Apr 11Croatia looks set to be the second ex-Yugoslav state after Slovenia to join the EU
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Croatia has moved closer towards wrapping up its EU entry talks and its neighbour Hungary says that could happen by July.

Hungary is steering the talks as current holder of the EU presidency – a role it hands over to Poland in July.

On Monday EU-Croatia negotiations on fisheries were completed.

Only four negotiating “chapters” remain – including tough judicial and competition issues. Croatia is on track to become the 28th EU state.

Later this week the European Commission plans to recommend completing accession talks with Croatia so that it can join the bloc in mid-2013, EU sources are quoted as saying.

Hungary’s top diplomat in Brussels, Peter Gyorkos, said “the Hungarian presidency will do its utmost to close the negotiations before the end of the presidency’s term”.

But in a statement he said the remaining chapters were perhaps the most difficult politically and would require much effort from Croatia.

The former Yugoslav republic needs to harmonise its privatisation of state-owned shipyards with EU rules on state aid.

On judicial reforms, the EU has pressed Croatia to deal more effectively with high-level corruption and tackle a backlog of court cases.

Judicial issues are especially sensitive because the last EU countries to join – Bulgaria and Romania in 2007 – failed to meet full EU standards in that area. The EU imposed a monitoring mechanism on them to deal with the shortcomings.

If the Commission recommends Croatian accession then all 27 member states still have to back it and ratify the accession treaty before Croatia can join.

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Indian activist plans new protest

Baba RamdevBaba Ramdev says he is on a “fast unto death” against corruption
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Indian PM Manmohan Singh has said that that the police crackdown on an anti-graft hunger strike by yoga guru Baba Ramdev in Delhi was “unfortunate”.

But Mr Singh justified the move saying there was “no alternative”.

Police in Delhi broke up the yoga guru’s fast over the weekend after angry exchanges with the authorities.

Around 30 people were injured as police fired tear gas to disperse thousands of his supporters. An injured woman supporter is in a critical condition.

Civil society groups and leading anti-corruption campaigners have condemned the police action on Baba Ramdev and his supporters.

In his first remarks on Sunday night’s incident, Mr Singh told reporters: “It is unfortunate that the operation had to be conducted, but quite honestly, there was no alternative.”

He said the government was “serious” about tackling corruption, but there was “no magic wand”.

The main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party has criticised Mr Singh’s statement, saying it was “insensitive”.

“It is unfortunate, unexpected and bizarre statement made by the prime minister. It’s inhuman, insensitive and complete carelessness on the part of the government,” party spokesperson Rajiv Pratap Rudy said.

Separately the Supreme Court has directed the government to explain the circumstances leading to the crackdown at Ramlila Maidan, a ground in Delhi where the yoga guru was holding a hunger strike with thousands of supporters.

“The brutal force that was used by the police to disperse innocent people who had gathered at the Ramlila Maidan in furtherance of the permission granted by the state is a matter of concern for the court,” the court said.

The government has justified the crackdown on Baba Ramdev’s hunger strike, saying that the yoga guru had reneged on his promises during negotiations.

Baba Ramdev has vowed to continue his hunger strike against corruption in his home city of Haridwar.

He wants the recovery of suspected bribe money allegedly held overseas.

Baba Ramdev was detained by police on Sunday night and then sent out of Delhi.

He has said that the police action on his fast in Delhi was a “blot on democracy and a conspiracy to kill me”.

Baba Ramdev’s protest comes as the Congress-led Indian government is struggling with a corruption scandal surrounding the sale of mobile phone operating licences.

He has also called for the death penalty for corrupt government officials.

The yogi, whose daily TV programme is watched by millions, began his fast on Saturday after cabinet ministers failed to convince him to call it off.

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Denials quiz

Denials quiz

US Congressmen Anthony Weiner has admitted he did indeed send lewd photos via Twitter, and not a hacker as he’d originally claimed. He is by no means the first politician to be caught out when attempting to deny an indiscretion. Test yourself.

Weiner's press conference

1.) Multiple Choice Question

Who tried to bat away allegations of an indiscretion as “not a national security thing”?

Weiner, Berlusconi and Clinton Anthony WeinerSilvio BerlusconiBill Clinton

2.) Multiple Choice Question

Earlier this year, the “it was a hacker” defence was used by another married New York congressman – Republican Chris Lee. What had he been caught doing?

Sending a topless photo to a woman who was not his wifeSending e-mails describing himself as divorced, and a “very fit fun classy guy”Both of the above

3.) Multiple Choice Question

Bill Clinton initially denied an affair with Monica Lewinsky. Which did he say under oath?

Monica Lewinsky and Bill Clinton, photographed in Nov 1995 “I did not have sexual relations with that woman””I’ve never had an affair with her””The great story here for anybody willing to find it…is this vast right-wing conspiracy”

4.) Multiple Choice Question

“He wasn’t ashamed of it at the time and he wanted it to continue.” Said who, after an ex-lover described their affair as the most shameful episode in his life?

Kay Summersby, on Dwight EisenhowerAnne Pingeot, on Francois MitterrandBritish MP Edwina Currie, on John Major

5.) Multiple Choice Question

“If I had done everything I am said to have done, she would have gouged my eyes out.” Said who, using the “my wife/girlfriend would never allow it” defence?

Chirac, Schwarzenegger, Berlusconi Jacques ChiracArnold SchwarzeneggerSilvio Berlusconi

6.) Missing Word Question

‘I can’t say with * if it’s my crotch’

certitudehand on heart

7.) Multiple Choice Question

“I warned him often enough: the day Napoleon left Josephine, he lost everything.” Said the wronged wife of which politican?

Jacques Chirac, former French presidentJohn Edwards, US presidential hopefulJohn F Kennedy, former US presidentCharles Haughey, former Taoiseach of Ireland

Answers

It was Weiner, when still denying he sent photos of his underwear-clad mid-section to a college student. It wasn’t a matter of national security, said the New York Democrat, as it wasn’t his official e-mail account that had been used. It was both, sent in response to a “women seeking men” advert on a Craigslist internet forum. Lee resigned soon afterwards, but not before his spokesman claimed it was a hack attack. He said “I’ve never had an affair with her,” referring to Monica Lewinsky, under oath in a deposition relating to another alleged indiscretion (with Paula Jones). He argued this was true under a detailed legal definition of “sexual relations”. The “that woman” quote was at a White House press conference. And it was Hillary Clinton who blamed a “right-wing conspiracy”. It was Edwina Currie. Her 2002 memoirs included details of her four-year affair in the 1980s with John Major. Meanwhile, WWII rumours swirled around Eisenhower and his aide, Kay Summersby. Years later, she titled her memoirs My Love Affair with Dwight – but said it was unconsumated. And Mr Mitterrand had a child with Anne Pingeot, but kept their relationship secret for years. It was Silvio Berlusconi, who said his girlfriend had been at the so called “bunga bunga” parties at which he was accused of paying for sex with an underage dancer. Meanwhile, Schwarzenegger and wife Maria Shriver parted company shortly before it was revealed he’d fathereda child with their housekeeper. And in a 2001 book, Bernadette Chirac implicitly admitted her husband’s past infidelities. It’s certitude. At a press conference last week, he admitted he could not say “with certitude” whether the lewd photo sent to a university student was of him. It’s Bernadette Chirac, In her 2001 book, she also wrote: “Convention meant that in this kind of situation you put up a front and just kept going.” Meanwhile, John Edwards faces charges of using campaign funds to hide an affair. JFK reportedly carried on with a number of women. And in 1999, gossip columnist Terry Keane revealed she and Irish politician Charles Haughey had been lovers for 27 years.

Your Score

0 – 2 : Under the carpet

3 – 5 : Out in the open

6 – 7 : Above board

For past quizzes, try the weekly news quiz, published every Friday. You can catch up here: Weekly world news quiz 2 June

And if you want to give your long-term memory a vigorous workout, here is the quiz from the week before: Weekly world news quiz 27 May

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Branching out – pitch-sized tree sets UK record

Oriental Plane, Corsham Court, WiltshireThe branches of the vast 250-year-old tree are completely unsupported
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A tree the size of a football pitch in Wiltshire has been identified as the “most spreading” tree in the UK.

The Oriental plane at Corsham Court was planted by master landscape gardener Lancelot “Capability” Brown in 1760.

With an average spread of 210ft (64m) it has been identified in a study by the Tree Register of the British Isles as the country’s vastest tree.

The research included 200,000 of the UK’s most “superlative” trees.

The Tree Register’s new study has identified Britain’s most spectacular trees.

The plane at Corsham Court, near Chippenham, has been singled out as having the “largest single spread”.

It is so vast that its lowest branches rest on the ground and some have taken root.

“Several trees rest their branches on the ground, but it’s the most impressive of these and it’s the most spreading tree that we know of,” said Owen Johnson, the registrar.

“It extends in each direction with branches like elephant trunks snaking across the ground – it’s a very confusing tree.”

Originating in the Middle East, the plane was planted as a specimen tree at the privately-owned historic home.

“It’s a massive tree with long horizontal branches which have no supports at all.

“It’s extraordinary that it’s standing without falling down,” said James Methuen-Campbell, the current occupant.

“We recruited a tree surgeon a few years ago who suggested taking 3m off all the branches around the tree for health and safety.

“But it’s such a huge, old tree I wanted to leave it to age naturally.”

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Cable burns man ‘unrecognisable’

James SorbySorby was badly injured in a 21,000 volt strike from a live power line

A self-confessed metal thief who was seriously burned trying to steal live power cables said his injuries were so bad his daughter did not recognise him in hospital.

James Sorby, 22, of Cavalier Close, Cross Green, Leeds, was left close to death after being hit with a 21,000 volt shock at a power sub-station.

The impact blew part of his skull off, leaving his brain exposed.

Leeds magistrates gave him a 12-month community service order for burglary.

He said the exact detail of what happened during the incident at Skelton Grange earlier this year is unclear.

He said: “All I can remember is going into the empty warehouse.

“It wasn’t until she could smell me and hear my voice that she realised I was her dad and not some stranger”

James Sorby

“I definitely didn’t grab the cabling with my hands because I wouldn’t do something like that, but I accept I was there to steal the cabling because there was no other reason for me to be there.

“The next thing I remember is the ambulance arriving. I was in a bad way.”

Sorby said ambulance staff cut off his clothes.

“There was blood everywhere. It was coming out of the top of my head, my ears, my nose, and from my gums.

“I was taken to hospital, and the first 48 hours were crucial because that’s the time when you’re said to ‘cook’ inside.

“The pain was unbelievable and the doctors told me I only survived because I am so young and fit, which also means my injuries won’t take as long to heal.

Stuck to pillow

“If I had been older it would have been a lot worse.

“The skin grafts were horrible and they had to take the staples out of my skin while I was awake.

“One morning when I woke the skin which had been grafted onto my face had stuck to the pillow, and it had to be done again.”

He said he had not seen his three-year-old daughter until eight weeks after the incident because he was so badly injured.

He said: “When I finally got to see her, she didn’t know who I was.

“It wasn’t until she could smell me and hear my voice that she realised I was her dad and not some stranger.

“It was a horrible experience to realise that your own daughter didn’t know who you were.”

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Jones royal opening ‘disrespect’

Ieuan Wyn JonesIeuan Wyn Jones will return to work next week after an extended break
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Plaid Cymru leader Ieuan Wyn Jones has been called “disrespectful” for being on holiday and missing the Welsh assembly’s royal opening.

Instead, Plaid AM Jocelyn Davies took his place in the line-up of party leaders greeting the Queen.

Labour’s Lynne Neagle said it showed a lack of respect to shun the opening. Welsh Conservatives called his absence “disappointing”.

Mr Jones is on leave, having extended his half term break, the party said.

The former deputy first minister in the last Welsh government will also be absent for Wednesday’s plenary meeting of the assembly, including First Minister’s Questions.

The Anglesey AM is due to return to work next week.

Labour AM Ms Neagle said: “It’s completely disrespectful for a party leader to shun the official opening of the fourth session of the assembly to take some time off.

Jocelyn DaviesPlaid Cymru AM Jocelyn Davies (left) meets the Duke of Edinburgh in place of Ieuan Wyn Jones

“The fact that Ieuan Wyn Jones needs a rest is symptomatic of the current state of his party.

“Plaid Cymru has looked tired for a considerable amount of time.”

A spokesman for the Welsh Conservatives said: “It is extremely disappointing to see the leader of a Welsh political party failing to take part in such an important and established event.

“That he is currently on holiday during term time, when he is being paid to represent his constituents in the assembly, only adds to Plaid’s embarrassment.”

“I don’t think that’s a problem, as long as someone else represents him”

Kathryne Sendeyo

In response, a Plaid Cymru spokesperson said: “The Tories would be better off focusing their attention on improving the disastrous policies of their own government in London, which is cutting jobs and services in communities across Wales.

“The leader’s duties during the official opening were carried out by another Plaid AM, Jocelyn Davies.”

Outside the Senedd where the royal event took place, people were asked for their views about Mr Jones’ absence.

Mary Prince, 79, from Cardiff, said: “He should have been there. It looks like he is being disrespectful to the Queen.”

Dave Taylor, 68, from Cardiff Bay, said it was “very bad” that Mr Jones did not attend, adding “he has a responsibility to his party and to Wales”.

“This is an important event today and all party leaders should be there. It’s an abdication by him,” he said.

But Kathryne Sendeyo, 24, from Cardiff, said: ” I don’t think that’s a problem, as long as someone else represents him.”

Four Plaid Cymru AMs boycotted the royal opening of the assembly’s new term, with some attending an alternative republican day event in Cardiff Bay.

Mr Jones announced he would stand down as party leader sometime during the first half of this five-year assembly term following his party’s poor performance in May’s assembly election.

He said it had always been his intention to step down before the next election.

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Howell ‘so sorry’ inquest hears

Lesley Howell and Trevor BuchananThe bodies of Lesley Howell and Trevor Buchanan were found in a car in 1991
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An inquest has found that two people murdered by Colin Howell and his lover Hazel Stewart were the victims of “homicidal carbon monoxide poisoning”.

The original inquest into the deaths of Trevor Buchanan and Lesley Howell ruled they had died from suicide in May 1991.

However, following an admission of guilt by Howell and the later trial of Hazel Stewart, it emerged the pair had gassed their partners.

The coroner John Leckey expressed his sympathy to the victims’ families.

He said the circumstances of the deaths were exceptional and he was conscious the families wanted to set the record straight.

“Lesley Howell and Trevor Buchanan went to their graves subject to the gross lies that they had taken their own lives, but eventually the truth came out,” he said.

The court also heard on Tuesday that Howell had written a letter of remorse to the coroner.

In the letter, which was read to the court, Howell said: “I wish I could turn back time but I cannot and I am helpless to offer up any good thing except for my acts of remorse and the hope of healing for my victims who have been so deeply impacted and wounded by me.

“I am so sorry.”

The new inquest was ordered by the Northern Ireland Attorney General John Larkin in April.

At the inquest, a police officer confirmed that close friends of Mr Buchanan and Mrs Howell had expressed concerns that the deaths were suspicious to police at the time of the original investigation.

The officer said there had been an “investigation of sorts” into the comments.

He also said he wanted to add that Mr Buchanan did have a cut on his lip.

Trevor Buchanan, a 32-year-old policeman and Mrs Howell, 31, were found in a car in a fume-filled garage in the seaside town of Castlerock, County Londonderry.

Howell must serve at least 21 years after admitting their murders, while his former lover Hazel Stewart was given a minimum 18-year sentence.

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UK marines on Yemen exit standby

Anti-government protesters spray foam and wave the national flag to celebrate Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh's departure to Saudi Arabia in SanaaAnti-government protesters celebrate after President Saleh left for medical treatment in Saudi Arabia

Some 80 Royal Marines are on standby off the coast of Yemen to assist with the possible evacuation of British civilians, the BBC has learned.

The marines are thought to be aboard a naval support ship, RFA Fort Victoria, near Yemen, according to naval sources.

The Ministry of Defence said British military assets were in the region but it would not comment on their exact operational task.

Yemen has been affected by weeks of political instability and violence.

President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who has ruled since 1978, has refused to leave office despite protests and a tribal uprising which has brought the country to the brink of civil war and resulted in more than 350 deaths.

According to naval sources, as well as Fort Victoria, another support vessel, RFA Argus, has also been operating in the region near Yemen, but is being replaced by the RFA Cardigan Bay, an auxiliary landing ship, which is on its way.

The ships are all part of the Royal Navy’s Response Force Task Group, which has been carrying out exercises mainly in the Mediterranean, but which has been on standby for various contingencies.

The Ministry of Defence has said only that, as part of routine deployment, British military assets are in the region.

At the weekend, Foreign Secretary William Hague said he was worried about the situation in Yemen and urged any remaining Britons in the country – who are thought to number a few hundred – to leave immediately while commercial flights were still operating.

He reiterated advice first made on 12 March, said it was “unlikely” the UK would be able to evacuate stranded nationals, and told people not to plan for government assistance.

Another ship in the Royal Navy’s Response Force Task Group, the helicopter carrier HMS Ocean, has been used as the launching pad for four Apache helicopters operating against targets in Libya.

A fifth Apache is expected to join the ship later in the week.

Earlier, Yemen’s main opposition coalition said it would accept a transfer of power to Vice-President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, after he stepped in when Mr Saleh left Saudi Arabia for medical treatment following an attack on his compound in Sanaa last week.

Otherwise, the opposition leaders said, they would seek to form a transitional government.

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Chile volcano ash cloud spreads

Man shows a volcanic stone from Chile's Puyehue volcano at Cardinal Samore Pass on the border between Chile and Argentina, near Osorno in southern Chile, on 6 June, 2011Ash, grit and pumice stones have fallen on the region since the eruption
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Chilean authorities have expanded the evacuation area around a volcano range that continues to spew out ash.

Officials say there is a danger of flash floods caused by rivers being silted up with volcanic grit.

The Puyehue-Cordon-Caulle volcano range, about 800km (500 miles) south of the capital, Santiago, began erupting at the weekend.

In neighbouring Argentina, several airports are closed and officials are monitoring the spread of the ash cloud.

An estimated 4,000 people have already left the region around the volcanoes and Chilean officials have been trying to persuade more people to go.

They are concerned that the volcanic material could clog rivers and cause them to burst their banks.

“The forecast is for more rain on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday,” an official from the national emergencies office (Onemi) told Efe news agency.

In Argentina, ski slopes in the resort of Bariloche, about 100km (62 miles) east of the volcano, have been blanketed in ash.

Several airports have been closed while border crossings between Chile and Argentina have been closed.

Bulldozer clearing ash

Many roads have been blanketed in a thick layer of ash

Changing wind directions have pushed the ash cloud back and forth across southern Argentina and Chile.

Argentine officials are monitoring the spread of the ash, and say some could reach Buenos Aires province and the capital during Tuesday.

This is the first serious eruption of the volcano chain since 1960, when the area was hit by a massive earthquake.

Chile is one of the most volcanic countries on Earth. There are over 3,000 volcanoes dotted along its length, and around 80 of them are active.

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Australian sues over UAE jailing

Map of Fujairah emirate in UAE
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An Australian woman is suing her country’s government for allegedly giving her bad advice when she was in trouble abroad.

The hotel worker was jailed in the UAE after reporting she had been raped by fellow employees.

The complainant says Australian consular officials failed to warn her that she could be jailed for adultery if she reported the alleged assault.

She spent eight months in prison for adultery and drinking without a permit.

The 29-year-old woman says she was drugged and raped by work colleagues at the hotel in the Emirate of Fujairah in 2008.

She contacted her consulate for help, and says she received no warning from officials about the risks of making a complaint.

After reporting the incident to police, she was imprisoned until her pardon in March 2009. It is illegal to have sexual relations outside marriage in the UAE.

Now she has filed a lawsuit in Brisbane Supreme Court.

“The Embassy’s deficient advice led to this woman spending a hellish eight months in prison,” said her lawyer, Michelle James, in a statement.

“She was not told she could be jailed for reporting a sexual assault. If she had known that, she would not have reported the assault and would have tried to leave the country immediately.”

The Australian Department of Foreign Affairs said it will contest the claim, but declined to comment further.

The complainant is also suing her employers at the hotel, alleging they failed to protect her.

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Four rescued from building blaze

Four people have been rescued by firefighters tackling a large blaze in a shop and flat in Crieff in Perthshire.

The fire broke out in the building in High Street at about 0300 BST.

A man and woman had to be rescued from the flat above the shop and two other men were taken to safety from an adjacent flat.

The main road through the town was closed for several hours but has now reopened.

Firefighters remained at the scene and were involved in a clear-up operation. An investigation into the cause of the blaze has been launched.

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