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Burberry outletThe money will be spent on rebuilding, and on compensating victims of the Fukushima nuclear crisis.Japan is facing huge public debts and will not borrow money from the market for this budget.This second emergency budget, announced on Tuesday, will be sent to parliament for approval later this month.In May parliament passed a 4tn yen emergency budget following the 11 March earthquake and tsunami.
Louis vuitton handbagsThat money is to help fund new housing for tens of thousands of people who have lost their houses. It will also support businesses hit by the disaster.
The quake and tsunami that hit Japan's north-eastern coast has left more than 20,000 people dead or missing.It is thought to be the country's worst disaster since World War II.
Five Finger ShoesThe Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant has been leaking radiation since the quake and tsunami crippled reactor cooling systems.
About 85,000 people have been forced to evacuate the area around the plant.
The government said it plans to use money left over from the annual budget for the last fiscal year to March for this new budget.
"With this budget we aim to ensure steps towards restoration and pave the way for reconstruction," Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda told reporters.
Prime Minister Naoto Kan, who has been facing increasing pressure to resign for his handling of the nuclear crisis, had said the passage of this extra budget was one of his conditions after which he would keep his promise to resign.
The blasts occurred as people reported to work at the municipal building in Taji, 12 miles north of the capital.
Late Monday, at least three more people were killed and 13 wounded when a Katyusha rocket was fired into Baghdad's Green Zone enclave, home to enbassies and the Iraqi government. The rocket hit trailers for the construction crew working on the Rashid Hotel, a landmark building in the capital that is being renovated.
The bombings were the latest in a series of attacks across Iraq, many of them targeting government employees, that serve as a reminder that the war-torn country is still far from stable and continues to face a tenacious insurgency even as U.S. security forces prepare to complete their withdrawal at year's end.
