The Citizen (Gauteng)

False nuclear alert in Hawaii

‘HUMAN ERROR’: GOVERNOR APOLOGISES TO STATE

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Islanders and visitors scrambled for safety, thinking a missile is on its way.

An emergency alert was sent mistakenly on Saturday to Hawaii’s residents warning of an imminent ballistic missile attack when an employee at the state emergency management agency pushed the “wrong button”, Hawaii’s governor said.

State officials and the US military’s Pacific Command confirmed that there was no actual threat to the state.

But for more than a half hour, while the agency struggled to retract the warning, panicked Hawaiians scrambled to find shelter.

The mistaken alert told residents and visitors on the island to take immediate shelter. “This is not a drill.”

The alert, sent to mobile phones and aired on television and radio shortly after 8am, was issued amid high internatio­nal tensions over North Korea’s developmen­t of ballistic nuclear weapons.

Governor David Ige told a news conference he was “angry and disappoint­ed” over the incident, apologised for it and said the state would take steps to ensure it never happens again.

“What happened today was totally unacceptab­le,” the Democratic Party governor said.

Ige said the alert was sent during a shift change at the Hawaii Emergency Management Agency, and that the state had no automated process to get out the word that it was a false alarm. Vern Miyagi, the agency’s administra­tor, called it “human error”.

“An employee pushed the wrong button,” Ige said.

Stacey Bow, 56, of Honolulu, said she received the emergency alert on her smart phone. She awakened her 16-year-old daughter with the news.

“She became hysterical, crying, you know, just lost it,” she said.

Ige said the emergency management agency ordered a change in its procedures after the incident, requiring two employees, not just one, to send out such an alert in future.

He said such shift changes occur three times a day every day of the year.

Miyagi, who said Hawaii would have only 12 to 13 minutes of warning in an actual attack, declined to say what action would be taken against the employee. Hawaii is a US state. – Reuters

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