3,000 More Dead Pigs Won’t Making the Huangpu River Any Worse

The Huangpu River, a source of drinking water to Shanghai’s 23 million residents, should basically be called rotting swine soup. Some 3,000 more decomposing pigs have been found in the river near Shanghai since Monday, bringing the number to about 6,000 dead hogs, but authorities claim that water is just fine.

“If the water is contaminated, we will put more disinfectants and activated carbon to purify the water,” Qian Huizhong, Deputy Director of Xiaokunshan Water Plant in Shanghai was quoted as saying in Xinhua, China’s state-run news agency. Officials also said “no pollution has been found” in Shanghai’s water quality. Officials said “the city is working to ensure its water quality, including removing pigs while they are further upstream, setting up aquatic plant barriers and increasing the frequency of quality checks,” reports Shanghai Daily. The local government released a statement explaining that “the water quality of the upper reaches of the Huangpu river is generally stable, basically similar to the same period last year.”

So on the bright side, the water quality is basically the same as last year. And on the not-so-bright side, exactly how terrible was the water quality in the Huangpu if 6,000 dead pigs don’t move the needle? On Monday it was reported that the dead pigs were marinating in other refuse, like medical waste and a sex doll. According to CNN’s water expert, those Chinese water authorities might be minimizing the toll of those decomposing pigs are having on Shanghai’s water system: 

If the water treatment process is very effective and can handle the sudden glut of contaminants, it’s possible to minimize the impact, said Julian Fyfe, a senior research consultant specializing in water quality at the University of Technology Sydney.

But he added: “Most treatment plants would not be designed to accommodate that level of shock loading. It’s such an unsual event.”  […] “If they are chlorinating heavily, which a lot of places may do, especially if they’ve got a very polluted water body to start with, then the effects could potentially be small,” Fyfe said.

Even if Shanghai residents don’t believe what the authorities are feeding them about the water, they don’t really have a choice but to accept it. In China’s eastern province of Zheijhang,  environmentalist Chen Yuqian dared authorities to swim in a local, very-polluted river to make a point about how dirty it was. Late last month, Chen told Radio Free Asia that “40 unidentified people had showed up at his home and smashed it up, beating him up in the process.”

via The Atlantic Wire http://www.theatlanticwire.com/global/2013/03/3000-more-dead-pigs-isnt-making-huangpu-river-any-worse/63038/

Fidel Castro Shows His Face for the Time in Three Years

While most of the Western world was focused on the Super Bowl, Fidel Castro came out of hiding to make his first public appearance since 2010. Castro emerged from seclusion to vote in Cuba’s general election on Sunday and is looking good for a guy everyone thought was pretty much dead just a year ago. Here are a couple more shots of Castro’s surprise visit: 

And one more:

The reason these pictures and Castro’s appearance is so important is because the 86-year-old Castro’s health, not unlike Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez’s currently, is usually a tightly guarded secret—tighter when he’s not doing so well and looser when he’s feeling better. It was just last October that there were reports that Castro had a stroke and was dangerously close to a “neurovegetative state”. Russian channel RT.com points out that this “is the first time, the Cuban hero has voted publically in the last three elections since falling ill in 2006 and handing over power to his brother Raul in 2008” and his first public appearance of any kind since 2010.  

And Castro used his surprise visit to, yes, spread a political message. “The people are truly revolutionary, they have really sacrificed. We don’t have to prove it, history will. Fifty years of the blockade and they haven’t given in,” Castro is quoted as saying in Reuters’s report.

via The Atlantic Wire http://da.feedsportal.com/c/35094/f/648528/s/2836f2d1/l/0L0Stheatlanticwire0N0Cglobal0C20A130C0A20Cfidel0Ecastro0Eshows0Ehis0Eface0Etime0Ethree0Eyears0C617540C/ia1.htm