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Meanwhile, a strong earthquake shook the region and prompted a brief tsunami alert early Monday. The quake off the battered coast of Miyagi prefecture in the northeast was measured as a magnitude 6.5, the Japan Meteorological Agency said. No damage or injuries were reported, and TEPCO said the quake would not affect work to stabilize the plant. Scores of strong earthquakes have rattled Japan over the past two weeks, adding to the sense of unease across Japan, where the final death toll from the March 11 disasters is expected to top 18,000. Confusion at the plant has intensified fears that the nuclear crisis will last weeks, months or years amid alarms over radiation making its way into produce, raw milk and even tap water as far away as Tokyo. TEPCO officials said Sunday that radiation in leaking water in the Unit 2 reactor was 10 million times above normal
-- an apparent spike that sent employees fleeing the unit. The day ended with officials saying the huge figure had been miscalculated and offering apologies. "The number is not credible," TEPCO spokesman Takashi Kurita said hours later. "We are very sorry." Then, TEPCO Vice President Sakae Muto said a new test had found radiation levels 100,000 times above normal
-- far better than the first results, though still very high. The government and nuclear safety agency chastised TEPCO for the latest in a series of missteps. "This sort of mistake is not something that can be forgiven," Edano said sternly Monday. The crisis did not interrupt a yearly rite much loved by the Japanese: the blooming of cherry trees at Tokyo's Yasukuni Shrine. Cherry trees typically begin blooming in the south in March, in the capital days later, and in the chilly north in April. Trees at the Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo began blooming Monday, the country's meteorological agency said.
[Associated
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