The Philippine Star

Hawaii readies war kits vs possible NoKor attack

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HONOLULU (AFP) — Hawaii is the first state to prepare the public for the possibilit­y of a ballistic missile strike from North Korea.

The state’s Emergency Management Agency on Friday announced a public education campaign about what to do.

Hawaii lawmakers have been urging emergency management officials to update cold war-era plans for coping with a nuclear attack as North Korea develops nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles that can reach the islands.

Starting in November, Hawaii will begin monthly tests of an “attack-warning” siren the state hasn’t heard since the end of the cold war in the 1980s.

The wailing siren will be tested on the first working day of each month, after a test of an “attention-alert” steady tone siren with which residents are already familiar.

Informatio­nal brochures, along with TV, radio and internet announceme­nts will help educate the public about the new siren sound and provide preparedne­ss guidance.

“If they’re not educated, they could actually be frightened by it,” agency executive director Toby Clairmont said of needing several months to introduce the new siren.

Because it would take a missile 15 minutes — maybe 20 minutes — to arrive, the instructio­ns to the public are simple.

“Get inside, stay inside and stay tuned,” said Vern Miyagi, agency administra­tor. “You will not have time to pick up your family and go to a shelter and all that kind of stuff ... It has to be automatic.”

He stressed that his agency is simply trying to stay ahead of a “very unlikely” scenario, but it’s a possibilit­y that Hawaii can’t ignore.

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