Alien Awakening : ce qu’aurait dû évoquer le film de Ridley Scott

Empire Magazine a mis la main sur quelques précisions concernant la suite d’Alien Covenant, connue sous le nom provisoire de “Alien : Awakening”…

En pleine promotion de Blade Runner 2049 l’an dernier sur lequel il officiait en tant que producteur, Ridley Scott en profitait pour livrer quelques idées sur la potentielle suite de son Alien : Covenant. “Je crois en avoir presque fini avec l’évolution de l’Alien lui-même, mais ce que j’essayais de faire était de transcender tout ça pour aller sur une autre histoire, centrée sur l’Intelligence Artificielle. Le monde que l’Intelligence Artificielle créerait si elle se retrouvait à la tête d’une nouvelle planète. On a déjà un plan bien développé pour le film suivant” lâchait ainsi le cinéaste.

Mais ça, c’était avant l’échec au Box Office mondial de son film, et des Critiques très mitigées. Baptisée Alien : Awakening dans sa version de travail, cette suite n’est pas prête de voir le jour, d’autant que le rachat de la Fox par Disney a mis de facto en Stand by toutes les franchises de la Fox, ciblées vers un public adulte. Empire Magazine rapporte ainsi à propos de cette suite que le scénariste John Logan avait prévu de faire commencer le film au moment même où Alien : Covenant s’achevait. Soit avec Michael Fassbender et le retour des Ingénieurs et des survivants de cette race après leur génocide. En juillet dernier, on parlait d’une possible série autour de la franchise Alien mais, là aussi, le futur de la licence est d’une opacité totale…

Bande-annonce Ben Is Back : Julia Roberts mère d’un ado en difficulté

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Découvrez la bande-annonce de Ben is back, drame familiale porté par Julia Roberts et le jeune Lucas Hedges. En salles le 16 janvier.

Et si 2019 était l’année de la consécration pour Lucas Hedges ? Le jeune acteur, nommé aux Oscars l’an dernier pour son rôle dans Manchester by the sea, sera cette année à l’affiche de 3 sérieux concurrents à la course aux Oscars : Ben is back, mis en scène par son père le réalisateur Peter Hedges, 90’s, la première réalisation de Jonah Hill (au cinéma le 20 février) et Boy Erased de Joël Edgerton (en salles le 27 mars 2019).

Et c’est Ben is back qui se dévoile aujourd’hui à travers une première bande-annonce. Emmené par Julia Roberts et Lucas Hedges, ce drame aux accents de thriller suit Ben, un jeune toxicomane qui revient chez lui le soir du réveillon de Noël, après 77 jours d’abstinence. Méfiante, sa mère l’accueille mais réalise rapidement qu’il n’a pas réglé tous ses problèmes. Présenté au Festival de Toronto en septembre dernier, les premières critiques du film saluent la prestation de Julia Roberts, en mère courage qui refuse de laisser tomber son fils et le porte à bout de bras.

Courtney B. Vance et Kathryn Newton figurent également au casting de ce film qui sortira dans nos salles le 16 janvier 2019.

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FanZone #793 – Spider-Man : que sait-on (ou pas) sur Far From Home ?

Il reviendra en solo le 3 juillet pour faire le tour de l’Europe et affronter Mysterio. A moins que celui-ci ne soit gentil. Qui seraient les méchants alors ? Voici tout ce que l’on sait (ou pas) sur “Spider-Man Far From Home”.

Réalisation et montage : Julien Lambert

“Spider-Man Far From Home” et vos plus grosses attentes geek et héroïques de 2019 :

Fanzone Emissions d'Actu

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Céline Sciamma : “La structure de Titanic n’est pas sans lien avec celle de Portrait de la jeune fille en feu”

En attendant de vous dévoiler nos entretiens complets avec l’équipe de “Portrait de la jeune fille en feu” présenté en compétition au Festival de Cannes 2019, découvrez un extrait de notre rencontre avec la réalisatrice Céline Sciamma.

AlloCiné : Portrait de la jeune fille en feu filme les regards, et qui porte sur le regard plus largement…

Céline Sciamma, scénariste et réalisatrice : C’est un relais de regards. Il y a quelqu’un qui vient pour regarder quelqu’un d’autre, parce que c’est sa mission. Il y a une circulation de regards qui se met en place entre les personnages, et qui est joueuse sur qui regarde qui dans ce dialogue amoureux. Mais aussi, entre elles toutes.

J’avais envie de faire un film avec de l’égalité, une histoire d’amour avec de l’égalité. Ne pas jouer de hiérarchies sociales, ne pas jouer de hiérarchie intellectuelle. Je crois que ça aussi ça parle de circulation des regards. Comment on se regarde ? Comment on est attentif ? C’est aussi un film sur l’écoute, ce sont des personnages qui s’écoutent, qui se répondent. Le film a une dimension méta sur la question du regard. C’est comme un grand relais, où l’on court toutes en même temps.

Diriez-vous que Portrait de la jeune fille en feu est votre film le plus personnel ?

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En tout cas, le plus adulte dans son intimité. Sans doute celui qui me ressemble le plus au moment où je le fais. En ayant parlé de jeunesse, forcément, même si j’ai toujours fait des films très premier degré, pas rétrospectif, ils sont tous personnels. Mais celui-là à une actualité, je crois. C’est mon premier film avec des adultes. Je crois qu’il parle de ça, d’une forme de maturité, des sentiments, des relations.

Vous poursuivez avec ce film votre collaboration avec Adèle Haenel (12 ans après Naissance des pieuvres), qui se montre sous un jour très différent, dans une forme de retenue…

Cela fait partie du projet de regarder Adèle aujourd’hui. Et forte de ça, des années, de la confiance, de prendre le risque de construire quelque chose de différent, sur des choses aussi très techniques. A quel endroit elle pose sa voix, d’articulation. Il y avait l’idée de proposer une Adèle neuve. C’était une envie qu’on avait toutes les deux.

On décèle un certain nombre de références dans votre film. Personnellement, j’y ai vu des échos à La belle noiseuse, à Carol, à Call Me By Your Name, à Un cœur en hiver…

Il y a Titanic. Il y a Bergman aussi. Personne ne le dit pour le moment, mais il y a un plan –et c’est la première fois de ma filmographie- qui est une citation. C’est Persona. Un plan très large dans lequel elle dépose sa tête sur son épaule, et ensuite il y a une sorte de raccord très étrange qui est vraiment directement une citation pour la première fois.

Carol est un film important qui est aussi un film d’amour et de création, un film de regard, parce qu’il y a aussi cet exercice photographique dans le film de Todd Haynes. La Leçon de piano. Ce sont des films qui donnent du courage. Il y a Mulholland Drive aussi. C’est un des films qui invente des formes pour raconter l’amour. Je crois qu’ils ont tous ce point commun.

Titanic s’impose peut être un peu plus parmi toutes ces références…

Titanic est un film matriciel d’un point de vue générationnel. Quand Titanic est sorti, j’avais 18 ans. C’est un des films les plus vus de l’histoire du cinéma. Il y a cette scène du dessin qui évoque Titanic. Il y a aussi la structure du film. Titanic est un des rares films qui présente à la fois le présent d’un amour et à quel point il a été émancipateur. La structure de Titanic n’est pas sans lien avec celle du Portrait. 

Notre podcast en direct de Cannes : Aujourd’hui la Team cannoise a vu le nouveau Terrence Malick, s’enthousiasme pour la première réalisation d’Hafsia Herzi, s’enflamme pour Adèle Haenel et Noémie Merlant, et se désole de ne pas voir Maradona jongler sur le tapis rouge.

Propos recueillis lundi 20 mai 2019, au Festival de Cannes / Entretien à découvrir en intégralité à la sortie du film le 18 septembre prochain.

Horner hails Verstappen’s ‘impressive’ defending from Rosberg

Christian Horner has described Max Verstappen’s defending from Nico Rosberg in the closing stages of the Canadian Grand Prix as “impressive”, with the Red Bull driver forcing the Mercedes man into a mistake.

Verstappen was initially running in third place on a one-stop strategy but he had to pit again after his soft tyres degraded too quickly.

Having dropped to fourth, the Dutchman then came under huge pressure from a charging Rosberg, but managed to hold off the DRS-aided Mercedes on the back straight by covering the inside line at the final chicane.

The championship leader launched another attempt in the same spot on the penultimate lap but ended up spinning after going on the outside of the Red Bull.

“It was great racing from Max,” Horner said. “He was determined to hold on to his fourth place. He positioned the car well and it was just great racing.

“It was impressive how he defended against Rosberg.”

Lining up ahead of Verstappen on the grid, Daniel Ricciardo immediately lost out to his team-mate at the start and from that moment on endured a frustrating afternoon to finish seventh.

“We’ve underscored with Daniel,” commented the Red Bull team principal. “We certainly could have been a place or so higher.

“I think he only had one clear lap the whole race. He was stuck behind Max in the first stint, went one lap longer then came out behind Kimi [Raikkonen].

“He was biding his time until Kimi pitted again with Valtteri [Bottas] relatively under control behind. He then started to push to break the DRS zone but unfortunately, he locked the tyre at the final chicane, had a big flat spot.

“We had no alternative but to pit him. Had his degradation been OK, he could have stayed ahead of Valtteri.”

2016 Canadian Grand Prix – F1i’s driver ratings

Hamilton beats Vettel to win in Canada

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Breakfast with … David Hobbs

Technical feature: Under the skin of the Haas VF-16

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Whiting brushes off radio ban safety fear allegations

FIA Formula 1 race director Charlie Whiting has refuted claims that this year’s new rules regarding limited radio communications may lead to safety concerns for drivers.

In a bid to force more autonomy on drivers out on the race track, the sport’s governing body further restricted the amount of communication between a driver and his team, prohibiting the latter to convey any information or detail which may aid the former in his driving or strategy.

As it dealt with Nico Rosberg’s rising brake temperatures in Australia, Mercedes’ Toto Wolff suggested the team’s pitwall struggled to communicate the  problem while remaining within  the radio rules.

But Charlie Whiting stated that teams also had the opportunity to convey any relevant information through a driver’s dash display.

“The safety critical stuff can be displayed on the dash, so they need to make sure they display the right things,” he explained to Autosport.

“It’s a question of managing it between the team and the driver without the need for the radio, without being told what settings to apply. They’ll deal with it.”

With a few provisions added to the radio rules on race day in Australia, and given the event’s red-flag context, Whiting believes teams dealt relatively well with the issue.

“I feel we have hit the right balance, personally. There were a few glitches when the race was stopped.

“A lot of the fuel recalculations weren’t reset, and stuff like that, so we had to fiddle about with a few of those with the teams.

“Teams had to tell the drivers to do a couple of things they wouldn’t normally have been allowed to do, but that was all done in consultation, so that was fine.”

RACE PREVIEW: Bahrain Grand Prix

Technical focus: 2016 F1 power units

FEATURE: A long wait – France’s 20-year win drought in F1

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3 minors are wounded and a suspect remains at large after stabbing attack in The Hague

Three minors were injured in the city’s Grote Marktstraat shopping district, police said. Their condition remains unknown.

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Videos and photos posted online showed crowds of shoppers running away after the incident and others being led out of the stores by first responders.

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Emma Evers had gone to the Grote Markstraat with her mother, but they got separated when people started running.

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“I realized something was happening. I started running and I was in panic because I couldn’t find my mom,” she told CNN.

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Evers said they eventually were able to find each other and went to nearby store as police closed the area.

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Authorities have asked on social media repeatedly for witnesses to come forward. They said the situation is “complex” and have not named a suspect or a possible motive.

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But it appears that “there is no indication of a terrorist motive,” Dutch national broadcaster NOS reported, citing unnamed sources.

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The incident happened on a busy shopping street near the Binnenhof, the Netherlands parliamentary buildings.

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The news came hours after a man was shot dead in central London by police officers, in a terrorist stabbing incident that left a number of people injured.

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This is what we know about London Bridge stabbing suspect Usman Khan

Khan, 28, was identified as the suspect in Friday’s central London attack that left two people dead and three others injured, Metropolitan Police Assistant Commissioner Neil Basu said.

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He was released from jail in December 2018 on an ankle monitor after he plead guilty to terrorism charges in 2012.

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Here’s what we know about the suspect:

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He was convicted of terror offenses

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In 2010, Khan and eight others were arrested in London as part of a major counterterrorism operation. Some of the men were accused of terror charges over an “al Qaeda-inspired plot” to bomb the London Stock Exchange, UK police said at the time.

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Khan, originally of Pakistan, admitted to other terror offenses involving fundraising and recruiting for a terrorist military training facility under the guise of a madrassa, or educational institution, on land in Kashmir that was owned by his family, according to court documents from the case.

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Authorities said Khan’s family land already had a mosque on it and those involved in the plot were looking to infuse the group with cash to “establish and operate a terrorist military training facility,” according to a sentencing document.

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Khan and another suspect in the case were accused of planning to train people at the facility with the goal of making them “more serious and effective terrorists,” the documents said.

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They were accused of attending operational meetings, fundraising and preparing to travel abroad to “engage in training for acts of terrorism,” according to the sentencing remarks.

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Khan pleaded guilty in 2012 to the charges and he was sentenced to 16 years in prison for his role.

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At the time of his sentencing, Deputy Assistant Commissioner Stuart Osborne, the senior national coordinator for counterterrorism, said the operation was one of the most complex counterterrorism operations at the time.

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“We had a network of highly dangerous men based in three cities who were working together to plan terrorist attacks in the UK,” Osborne said. “Had we not taken action to disrupt this network, their actions could have resulted in serious casualties or fatalities.”

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During the investigation in 2010, nearly 1,000 police officers were involved in the operation, which involved monitoring the men in Staffordshire, Wales and London, Osborne said. National counterterrorism forces and security services were involved in the operation.

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Khan was released from prison in 2018 with an ankle monitor, police said.

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Before Friday’s attack, he was residing in the Staffordshire area of England, about 150 miles north west of London, authorities said.

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Khan was at an event before the attack

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Khan attended an event at Fishmonger’s Hall said Basu, the assistant commissioner.

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Basu continued by saying “we believe the attack began inside before he left the building and proceeded onto the Bridge.”

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The event was scheduled from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. for alumni celebrating the five-year anniversary of the Learning Together Network. The group, a network of academics and criminal justice organizations, is affiliated with the University of Cambridge’s Institute of Criminology, the website for the event said.

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The University of Cambridge tweeted Friday, saying “we are gravely concerned at reports that University of Cambridge staff, students and alumni were caught up in the incident at London Bridge.”

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Stephen Toope, the vice chancellor of Cambridge, said he was devastated to learn that staff, students and alumni attending an event organized by the university’s Institute of Criminology may have been targeted during the attack.

Germany is closing all its nuclear power plants. Now it must find a place to bury the deadly waste for 1 million years

Where do you safely bury more than 28,000 cubic meters — roughly six Big Ben clock towers — of deadly radioactive waste for the next million years?

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This is the “wicked problem” facing Germany as it closes all of its nuclear power plants in the coming years, according to Professor Miranda Schreurs, part of the team searching for a storage site.

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Experts are now hunting for somewhere to bury almost 2,000 containers of high-level radioactive waste. The site must be beyond rock-solid, with no groundwater or earthquakes that could cause a leakage.

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The technological challenges — of transporting the lethal waste, finding a material to encase it, and even communicating its existence to future humans — are huge.

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But the most pressing challenge today might simply be finding a community willing to have a nuclear dumping ground in their backyard.

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Searching for a nuclear graveyard

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Germany decided to phase out all its nuclear power plants in the wake of the Fukushima disaster in 2011, amid increasing safety concerns.

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The seven power stations still in operation today are due to close by 2022.

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With their closure comes a new challenge — finding a permanent nuclear graveyard by the government’s 2031 deadline.

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Germany’s Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy says it aims to find a final repository for highly radioactive waste “which offers the best possible safety and security for a period of a million years.”

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The country was a “blank map” of potential sites, it added.

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Currently, high-level radioactive waste is stored in temporary facilities, usually near the power plant it came from.

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But these facilities were “only designed to hold the waste for a few decades,” said Schreurs, chair of environmental and climate policy at the Technical University of Munich, and part of the national committee assisting the search for a high-level radioactive waste site.

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As the name suggests, high-level radioactive waste is the most lethal of its kind. It includes the spent fuel rods from nuclear power plants. “If you opened up a canister with those fuel rods in it, you would more or less instantly die,” said Schreurs.

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These rods are “so incredibly hot, it’s very hard to transport them safely,” said Schreurs. So for now they’re being stored in containers where they can first cool down over several decades, she added.

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There are dozens of these temporary storage sites dotted across Germany. The search is now on for a permanent home at least 1 kilometer underground.

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Between a rock and a hard place

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The location will need to be geologically “very very stable,” said Schreurs. “It can’t have earthquakes, it can’t have any signs of water flow, it can’t be very porous rock.”

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Finland, which has four nuclear power plants and plans to build more in the future, is a world leader in this field. Work is well underway on its own final repository for high-level waste — buried deep in granite bedrock.

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Germany’s problem is “it doesn’t have a whole lot of granite,” said Schreurs. Instead, it has to work with the ground it’s got — burying the waste in things like rock salt, clay rock and crystalline granite.

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Next year the team hope to have identified potential storage sites in Germany (there are no plans to export the waste). It’s a mission that stretches beyond our lifetimes — the storage facility will finally be sealed sometime between the years 2130 and 2170.

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Communications experts are already working on how to tell future generations thousands of years from now — when language will be completely different — not to disturb the site.

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Schreurs likened it to past explorers entering the pyramids of Egypt — “we need to find a way to tell them ‘curiosity is not good here.'”

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People power

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For now, nobody wants a nuclear dumping ground on their doorstep.

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Schreurs admitted public mistrust was a challenge, given Germany’s recent history of disastrous storage sites.

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Former salt mines at Asse and Morsleben, eastern Germany, that were used for low- and medium-level nuclear waste in the 1960s and 1970s, must now be closed in multibillion-dollar operations after failing to meet today’s safety standards.

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The fears around high-level waste are even greater.

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For more than 40 years, residents in the village of Gorleben, Lower Saxony, have fought tooth-and-nail to keep a permanent high-level waste repository off their turf.

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The site was first proposed in 1977 in what critics say was a political choice. Gorleben is situated in what was then a sparsely populated area of West Germany, close to the East German border, and with a high unemployment rate that politicians argued would benefit from a nuclear facility.

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Over the decades, there have been countless demonstrations against the proposal. Protesters have blocked railway tracks to stop what they described as “Chernobyl on wheels” — containers of radioactive waste headed for Gorleben’s temporary storage facility.

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An exploratory mine was eventually constructed in Gorleben, but it was never used for nuclear waste. And in the face of huge public opposition, the government in recent years decided to start afresh its national search for a dumping ground.

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“If we did not build this big, strong and long-lasting resistance, I think the salt mine would already be used,” said Kerstin Rudek, 51, who grew up in Gorleben and has been campaigning against a permanent nuclear repository for the last 35 years.

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That doesn’t mean she and other activists plan on quitting their campaign anytime soon. “They haven’t canceled out Gorleben completely, so we are very suspicious it might still be chosen,” said Rudek.

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With more than 400 nuclear power plants around the world, many nearing the end of their operating lifetimes, the issue of waste storage will only become more urgent, said Schreurs.

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Germany is in the unique position of knowing exactly how much waste it will be dealing with. Knowing where to put it is the challenge.

Acts of heroism emerge after London terror attack

Dramatic videos of the attack show the heroic actions despite Khan — who is suspected of killing two people in the terrorist attack — wearing a fake bomb strapped to him.

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In the standoff on the north side of London Bridge, the convicted terrorist was sprayed with liquid from the extinguisher, while the man wielding the long tusk prodded it in the direction of the attacker.

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At least one of the several men who subdued the attacker was reported by British media as an ex-prisoner, who served time with Khan.

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The group wrestled him to the ground in a video, and one of the bystanders appeared to have disarmed Khan of one of two knives he is believed to have strapped onto his hand. Armed police shot Khan dead after the bystanders had moved away.

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A man and woman were killed in the attack on Friday, police said. Three others, a man and two women, were injured and remained hospitalized. None of the victims have been named.

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Everyday heroes

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The attack began just before 2 p.m. at an event in Fishmonger’s Hall, on the north side of London Bridge, organized by the University of Cambridge’s Institute of Criminology.

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The event, attended by Khan, was scheduled for alumni celebrating the five-year anniversary of the Learning Together Network. The group, a network of academics and criminal justice organizations, is affiliated with the University of Cambridge’s Institute of Criminology, the website for the event said.

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According to PA news agency, the 28-year-old had threatened to blow up the building just before 2 p.m. “We believe that the attack began inside before he left the building and proceeded onto London Bridge,” Metropolitan Police Assistant Commissioner Neil Basu said.

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Eyewitness Amy Coop tweeted about the incident, saying the man holding the tusk had taken it off the wall of the historic Fishmonger’s Hall.

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“A guy who was with us at Fishmongers Hall took a 5′ narwhale tusk from the wall and went out to confront the attacker. You can see him standing over the man (with what looks like a white pole) in the video. We were trying to help victims inside but that man’s a hero #LondonBridge,” she wrote on Twitter.

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The man is believed to work in the hall and “originally from Poland,” the Times of London reported.

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A maintenance worker who witnessed the attack told PA that he spoke to one of the men who helped wrestle the knifeman to the ground. “Some of the guys who were on top of him were ex-prisoners and they had all been in the Fishmongers’ Hall,” he told PA news agency. “The guy told me he was in prison with the attacker.”

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Tom Gray, a tour guide who tried to apprehend the suspect, told CNN affiliate ITV that the attacker was “wielding two knives, one was duct taped to his hand.” After other bystanders had held the suspect down, Gray said he tried to “stamp the other knife from his wrist” and then kicked it further down the bridge.

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Lloyd Griffiths, 35, who was on a bus on the bridge, said he saw the attacker had a large blade.

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“I saw a shine on a knife or metal blade, it was startling. It was large blade, it wasn’t small, and then I was locked on the bus, people tried to tackle to man trying to fight him, ordinary people jumping out of the car, trying to fight him,” Griffiths said.

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The standoff ended when armed police arrived. “Then police ran over with guns, screaming,” before shooting the man, Griffiths added. Multiple emergency vehicles quickly arrived on the scene as crowds of people fled the area.

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Searches continue

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Before Friday’s attack, Khan was residing in the Staffordshire area of England, about 150 miles northwest of London, authorities said.

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Questions have emerged about his early release from prison last year with an ankle monitor.

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Khan was among a group arrested in London over an “al Qaeda-inspired plot” to bomb the London Stock Exchange, UK police said at the time.

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He pled guilty to terrorism charges in 2012, but served under half of his 16 year sentence and was released in December 2018.

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The sentencing judge called Khan and two others “more serious jihadis” than the rest of their group, adding that in his view they would remain a “significant risk” to the public, even after their sentence.

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“In my judgment, these offenders would remain, even after a lengthy term of imprisonment, of such a significant risk that the public could not be adequately protected by their being managed on license in the community, subject to conditions, by reference to a preordained release date,” the judge said during the sentencing.

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In order to adequately protect “the safety of the public”, the judge said Khan’s release on license could only be “decided upon, at the earliest, at the conclusion of the minimum term” in prison, and imposed an indeterminate sentence on his release.

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This means a Parole Board would have to decide on his release after a minimum of 8 years in prison. Khan appealed his sentence and in April 2013 his conviction was overturned from an indeterminate sentence — which were abolished in 2012 — to an extended determinate sentence.

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An extended determinate sentence carries a fixed term and means you serve some of it in prison and the remainder in the community.

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Britain’s Parole Board said in a statement on Saturday that he appeared “to have been released automatically on license,” without a parole hearing.

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Police searches in Staffordshire continued through Saturday. According to PA Media, a police photographer and search teams entered a three-story block of flats near the town center on Saturday morning, while two uniformed officers were present at a cordon outside the building.

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The UK government says it was looking at the sentences handed out to the most violent offenders, Home Office minister Brandon Lewis said in a TV interview with CNN affiliate ITN on Saturday.

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“Are we issuing tough enough sentences for the most violent offenders? That’s something we want to look at and we will do so as swiftly as we can,” he said.

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