• Spanish superspy Francisco Paesa, 75, gets out of yet another scrape. Paru le 29/11/2011 dans The Guardian

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/nov/29/spanish-superspy-franciso-paesa

    For years Paesa featured on Interpol’s most wanted list after a Spanish court accused him of laundering millions of pounds stolen by a corrupt senior socialist government official.

    Paesa had previously been involved in a sting operation against the Basque terrorist group Eta in 1986, in which he sold them missiles fitted with radio transmitters so that they could be tracked by the police.

    His name was also mentioned in the mid-1990s as a middleman between the socialist government of prime minister Felipe González and the so-called Anti Terrorist Liberation Group (GAL), set up by Spain’s interior ministry to carry out attacks in south-west France on suspected Eta members.

    The group hired mercenaries from Portugal, Italy and elsewhere to carry out attacks that killed 26 people – a third of whom turned out to have nothing to do with Eta.

    Paesa’s contacts were said to be several bag men who worked in González’s office when he was prime minister between 1982 and 1996 – though courts found insufficient evidence to convict him of any GAL-related charges.

  • #Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant operator ’ignored tsunami warning’ | World news | The Guardian
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/nov/29/fukushima-daiichi-operator-tsunami-warning

    Tokyo Electric Power (#Tepco) officials rejected “unrealistic” estimates made in a 2008 internal report that the plant could be threatened by a tsunami of up to 10.2 metres, Kyodo news agency said.

    The tsunami that crippled backup power supplies at the plant on the afternoon of 11 March, leading to the meltdown of three reactors, was more than 14 metres high.

    #nucléaire

    (ce genre de truc qui ne fait scandale que dans les cas où la catastrophe est arrivée)