Home Tags Posts tagged with "memorial ceremony"

memorial ceremony

President Barack Obama has marked the 11th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, saying the US emerged “even stronger” from that day’s death and horror.

In New York, relatives are reading out the names of those killed when hijacked jets were crashed at the World Trade Center, Washington and Pennsylvania.

Barack Obama laid a wreath at the Pentagon and Vice-President Joe Biden is expected to speak at Shanksville.

For the first time, politicians will not address the ceremony in New York.

At the Pentagon, Barack Obama addressed survivors of the attacks and relatives of those killed. He told them their loved ones would never be forgotten, and that the dead had “helped us make the America we are today”.

“The true legacy of 9/11 will not be one of fear or hate or division,” Barack Obama said.

“It will be a safer world, a stronger nation, and a people more united than ever before.”

The National September 11 Memorial and Museum announced in July that this year’s ceremony at Ground Zero would include only relatives reading victims’ names.

The National September 11 Memorial and Museum announced in July that this year's ceremony at Ground Zero would include only relatives reading victims' names

The National September 11 Memorial and Museum announced in July that this year's ceremony at Ground Zero would include only relatives reading victims' names

Memorial President Joe Daniels said that, in an election year, it was “honoring the victims and their families in a way free of politics”.

Charles Wolf, whose wife Katherine was killed at the World Trade Center, said the absence of elected officials would make the event more intimate for the families.

“We’ve gone past that deep, collective public grief,” he said.

Tuesday dawned with a clear blue sky over Washington and New York, jogging memories of a similar September morning 11 years ago.

Nearly 3,000 people were killed that day in attacks by al-Qaeda members who had hijacked four airliners.

President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama observed a moment of silence at the White House at 08:45.

They then headed to the Pentagon to attend a memorial ceremony there, where one of the jets crashed, and then visit wounded soldiers at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

With a US election looming in November, President Obama and his Republican rival Mitt Romney have set aside campaigning for the day and will not run negative advertisements.

Mitt Romney was due to visit Reno, Nevada, to address a National Guard unit whose members were deployed as part of the US response to the attacks.

“On this most sombre day, those who would attack us should know that we are united, one nation under God, in our determination to stop them and to stand tall for peace and freedom at home and across the world,” Mitt Romney said in a written statement.

Vice-President Joe Biden and Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar were due to speak at the Flight 93 National Memorial, near Shanksville, where one of the jets crashed as passengers attempted to overpower the hijackers.

A 9/11 museum in New York was due to have been completed for the 11th anniversary but has been plagued by setbacks.

Officials say it will take at least another year to finish.

A new building – the $3.9 billion One World Trade Center – is due to open in 2014 on the north-west corner of Ground Zero.

Last year an outdoor memorial was opened at the site and has since been visited by almost 4.5 million people.

In the aftermath of the 2001 attacks, the US launched a campaign to destroy the al-Qaeda network headed by Osama Bin Laden.

A team of elite US troops killed the al-Qaeda chief in a raid on his Pakistani compound last year.

 [youtube 24E6Mb2g-Ko]

Japan marks one year commemoration of the devastating earthquake and tsunami, which struck the north-eastern coast, leaving 20,000 dead or missing.

The 9-magnitude quake, Japan’s most powerful since records began, also triggered a serious nuclear accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.

Thousands of people were evacuated as radiation leaked from the plant.

There were memorial services, and a minute’s silence was observed at the moment the quake hit, 14:46 local time.

The main memorial ceremony was held at Tokyo’s National Theatre, attended by Japan’s Emperor Akihito, Empress Michiko and Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda.

“We shall not let our memory of the disasters fade,” Emperor Akihito said in a brief televised address.

“I hope all the people will keep the victims in their hearts.”

PM Yoshihiko Noda pledged to rebuild so that Japan could be reborn “as an even better place”.

Japan marks one year commemoration of the devastating earthquake and tsunami, which struck the north-eastern coast, leaving 20,000 dead or missing

Japan marks one year commemoration of the devastating earthquake and tsunami, which struck the north-eastern coast, leaving 20,000 dead or missing

Much of Japan came to a standstill as the minute of silence was observed.

Warning sirens sounded across the north-east of the country at the precise time the quake struck, 14:46 local time. Bells and prayers also reverberated across the country.

The earthquake struck about 400 km (250 miles) north-east of Tokyo on 11 March 2011.

Shortly after the quake, an immense surge of water enveloped the north-eastern coast as a tsunami swept cars, ships, and buildings away, crushing coastal communities.

The twin natural disasters claimed more than 15,800 lives, and more than 3,000 people remain unaccounted for.

In the Fukushima prefecture, where the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant is located, the impact of the disaster was particularly acute.

Radiation leaked from the plant after a series of fires and explosions damaged four of the plant’s six reactor buildings, with serious failures in the plant’s cooling system being at the heart of the problem.

A 20 km (12.5 mile) exclusion zone around the plant was put in place making tens of thousands of people homeless. Radiation means the area around remains uninhabitable.

The plant is in cold shutdown now and PM Yoshihiko Noda has promised that over the decades to come it will be decommissioned. He has also pledged to rebuild the devastated towns along the coast.

However, Japan is still dealing with the economic and political fallout of the disaster. Japan’s prime minister at the time of the disaster, Naoto Kan, resigned months later.

Naoto Kan had been criticized for failing to show leadership during the nuclear crisis after the quake. The nuclear crisis also revealed serious flaws in the nuclear industry’s regulatory systems and safety standards.

Although much of the debris has been cleared, survivors from the devastated north-east have complained about slow recovery efforts.

 [youtube LPDUC08lG_Y]

[youtube M0pm_AxAtLY]