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Thought on the Times article re: Mayday Propaganda War starts - DU specific

mango | 16.02.2001 12:32 | May Day 2001

Le Monde diplomatique writes about Depleted uranium (2 items) - Solid info needs reading.

See  http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2001/02/03uranium for the story that prompts this post.

And they wonder why people are so very angry and preparing for major protests against the Kleptocracy in May?

Time we wrote an open letter to the Commissioner of Police detailing why people are so disgusted at the vile behaviour of our 'leaders'? Yep - I'm working on one. Any ideas gratefully received (here on IMC) on how to write in a language he might just understand...

My naive question, asked a million times already, is how can the 'forces of law and order' condone the blatant crimes of those who give them their orders yet at the same time intimidate and damage caring, decent folk for having the bravery to stand up and say YA BASTA to all this appalling evil (DU, Oil before people, climate change, death and destruction wherever profit is at risk, etc etc ad inf) being perpetrated by those in power?

mango
 http://www.environment.org.uk/activist/

'It is those who follow any authority blindly who are the real danger.' Prof P. Zimbardo, Stanford University.


'You assist an evil system most effectively by obeying its orders and decrees. An evil system never deserves such allegiance. Allegiance to it means partaking of the evil. A good person will resist an evil system with his or her whole soul.' - Mahatma Gandhi

mango
- Homepage: http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2001/02/03uranium

Comments

Hide the following 7 comments

You may be locked out!

16.02.2001 12:54

The URL above may deny you access - so much for getting the word out to those who care enough!

On top of that, IMC won't allow enough length to post it all in one comment!

bah!

mango
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the effing article - piece by piece

16.02.2001 12:56

Le Monde diplomatique February 2001



UN-BACKED COVER UP

Deafening silence on depleted uranium

_________________________________________________________________

In spite of the growing number of unexplained deaths and illnesses among
servicemen returning from the Gulf, Bosnia and Kosovo, UN agencies have,
to different degrees, cast a veil of silence over the chemical and
radiological hazards of depleted uranium. It was not until this January
that the World Health Organisation proposed a study of DU's effects on the
peoples of the Gulf region.

by ROBERT JAMES PARSONS *
* Journalist, Geneva

_________________________________________________________________

The World Health Organisation's report on depleted uranium (DU) has still
not materialised; since being announced, it was postponed several times
and only put back on the agenda because of pressure from international aid
agencies working in Kosovo. When news of "Balkan syndrome" first broke,
the WHO published in January this year a four-page "fact sheet" that
claimed to deal with the subject (1). Designed to calm the storm and
reassure the public, the information it contains is vague and often at
odds with current scientific knowledge. If there is any radiation, the
fact sheet claims, it is within acceptable levels: "From the science it
appears unlikely that an increased leukaemia risk related to DU exposure
would be detectable among military personnel in the Balkans."

How could the WHO, the world's highest authority in health matters, have
produced such a document? It recommends as "reasonable", for example, such
unlikely "clean-up operations" as collecting the thousands of billions of
invisible radioactive particles scattered over hundreds of square
kilometres and mixed with hundreds of thousands of tons of earth.

In fact, an agreement entered into with the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) in 1959 prevents the WHO from dealing with radiation and
public health matters without the former's approval. Approval that is
hardly ever given.

In the 1950s in the United States the Eisenhower administration made much
of the civilian spin-offs from military research in order to justify the
enormous sums being spent on the nuclear arsenal. In 1954 it started the
Atoms for Peace programme, promising the public electricity that was not
only "clean" but so abundant as to be "unmeterable".

At the time many members of the scientific community, with little or no
involvement in military research, recalled the work that had earned Herman
Joseph Muller a Nobel prize in 1946. He had discovered the terrifying
mutagenic effects of ionising radiation. It was this very radiation that
the power plants envisaged by Atoms for Peace were to introduce into the
heart of the civilian population. Yet Dr John W Gofman, who led the team
that isolated the first milligram of plutonium in 1942, continued to
hammer home his point that "by any reasonable standard of biomedical
proof, there is no safe dose" (2). In spite of such warnings the US
pressed for the formation in 1956 of the IAEA - a UN organisation whose
remit is quite simply to promote the nuclear industry.

mango
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the effing article - piece by piece - part2

16.02.2001 12:56

In 1957 the WHO organised an international conference on the effects of
radiation on genetic mutation; its basic premises, derived from Muller's
experiments, are found in the papers presented to the conference and
subsequently published (3). But in 1959 the debate was closed. The WHO
accepted the agreement with the IAEA according to which "whenever either
organisation proposes to initiate a programme or activity on a subject in
which the other organisation has or may have a substantial interest, the
first party shall consult the other with a view to adjusting the matter by
mutual agreement" (4). That "mutual agreement" stipulation was to allow
the IAEA to block almost every WHO initiative concerning the relationship
between radiation and public health.

That is why, when the WHO proposed publishing a fact sheet on depleted
uranium, nothing came of it. The generic study, still awaited, was to be
confined to chemical contamination from DU as a heavy metal. Only when DU
hit the international headlines did the WHO announce that the study would
be extended to radiation. The additional work would be done by experts
from such bodies as the United Kingdom's National Radiological Protection
Board (much criticised by British veterans suffering from Gulf War
syndrome) and, of course, the IAEA. The humanitarian aid organisations
working in Kosovo, such as the High Commission for Refugees (HCR), the
World Food Programme, the United Nations Department of Humanitarian
Affairs and the International Organisation for Migration, have to refer to
the WHO for all public health matters since they belong to the UN system.
So they are still waiting.

The current standards for the "tolerable" radiation dose presenting no
danger to the human organism were set on the basis of studies by the
Pentagon's Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission on survivors of the atomic
bombs dropped on Nagasaki and Hiroshima; one of the major objectives of
those studies, if not the main one, was to determine the bomb's
effectiveness as a weapon of war. The studies (details of which were not
published until 1965) began in 1950, when many victims who had initially
survived had already died from the consequences of the bombings. The group
studied consisted mainly of young sportsmen in relatively good shape.
Those particularly vulnerable to the harmful effects of radiation -
children, women and the elderly - did not appear at all.

These studies of survivors were soon brought to an end: there was no
waiting for the cancers that would take decades to appear. They were also
carried out by physicists with no training in biology. At the time they
knew nothing of the existence of DNA, let alone how it works, and they
made no distinction between the effects of a single, sudden, intense
explosion and those of radiation from an internal, slow, constant source -
like that given off by particles of depleted uranium which enter the body
by inhalation, ingestion or through open wounds.

The nuclear lobby has always claimed that the effects of low-level
radiation are too small to be studied. They therefore extrapolated from
the observed effects of high dose irradiation (Hiroshima and Nagasaki), on
the basis that if 1,000 survivors became ill after exposure to a dose of
100 (an arbitrary figure), 500 would be ill when exposed to 50 and only
one from a dose of 0.5. Thus, below that exposure no-one is affected (5).

mango
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the effing article - piece by piece - part3

16.02.2001 12:57

'SAFE' DOSES

But the British researcher Alice Walker showed the danger of low-level
radiation to the human organism in a study of children whose mothers were
x-rayed during pregnancy. In the 1970s she reached the same findings for
employees of the nuclear weapons plant in Hanford, US. In 1998, still
going strong despite her 91 years, she published with George W Kneale an
in-depth reappraisal of the studies made of the 1945 survivors, showing
irrefutably the errors present in the work on which the present standards
are based (6). But it is these standards that allow the WHO fact sheet to
speak of a "tolerable daily intake" for persons exposed to depleted
uranium. Likewise, Dr Chris Busby, a British researcher who has written a
number of works on the effects of low-level radiation (7) (disputed by the
nuclear establishment), has explained how chronic internal low-level
radiation systematically destroys the DNA of cells to produce the
mutations that lead to cancer.

The international standards have been revised downwards several times,
most recently in 1965, 1986 and 1990, by the International Commission for
Radiation Protection - which draws up the standards that are then applied
by the IAEA. The 1990 revision cut the permitted dose by a factor of five.
The US has still not accepted that revision. It is therefore on the basis
of doses five times higher than accepted by the rest of the world that
they claim their soldiers received "safe" doses during the Gulf war.

The highest authority in the matter in the US is the Atomic Energy
Commission (AEC), a civilian agency but in fact headed up by the military
high command, which in that way controls the development of all nuclear
technology. All the main sources of ionising radiation are therefore
controlled by persons and institutions with no interest in exploring their
dangers. The four most eminent scientific authorities to have worked for
the AEC were John Gofman, Karl Z Morgan, Thomas Mancuse and Alice Stewart.
Each in turn was sacked for presenting findings showing that exposure to
low-level radiation causes cancer (8). The WHO fact sheet therefore comes
in the context of a history of general denial of which the affair of
depleted uranium in Yugoslavia is only the latest episode.

In May 1999, during the Kosovo war, the UN arranged for representatives of
all the agencies involved in the conflict to go and make an initial
assessment of the situation. Each wrote a report that was then shared with
the other agencies. The UN Environment Programme (UNEP) took part, but its
report was suppressed. After it was leaked, the document, penned by Bakary
Kante, advisor to UNEP director general Klaus Toepfer, was made public on
18 June 1999 in two Swiss French-language newspapers, Courrier and Libert.
The report sounded the alarm on the pollution caused by the bombings,
specifically mentioning depleted uranium (9).

Another report on pollution, funded by the European Commission and
published that same June shortly after the end of the war, takes the
trouble to identify its sources (experts in the field, literature,
specialist monographs, etc.) but makes virtually no mention of depleted
uranium (10). The only reference appears in a brief list of the types of
pollution: "DU" followed by "in Yugoslavia - claimed". One might have
thought that the working party had been unaware of the Kante report. But
several paragraphs of its report reproduce it word for word, and the list
of 80 or so shelled sites is identical to that compiled by Kante.

Not long after that, the UNEP set up a working party, the Balkans Task
Force (BTF), to make a full report. Toepfer appointed Finland's former
environment minister Pekka Haavisto to lead it. He was adamant that
depleted uranium was part of the overall pollution picture and could not
be left out of the enquiry. If he was barred from studying it as
radioactive pollution, he would study it as chemical pollution (see box).

mango
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the effing article - piece by piece - part4

16.02.2001 12:58

WHERE ARE THE CONTAMINATED SITES?

On completion, it was announced that the BTF report (11) would be released
in Geneva on 8 October 1999. A journalist who went to the UNEP's Geneva
office, where the BTF is based, expecting to obtain a copy, was received
by Toepfer's spokesman and right hand man Robert Bisset, who refused him
any contact with Haavisto's team. Eventually, he was told there had been a
change of plan and that Haavisto would be giving a press conference on 11
October in New York. Since the journalists who were closely following the
issue of depleted uranium in Kosovo were all based in Geneva, they were
thus denied any possibility of interviewing the man who had written the
report.

Reworked by Bisset, the final part of the report was cut from 72 pages to
two (later, the missing parts were posted on the UNEP's internet site)
(12). Its findings and recommendations spoke of cordoning off contaminated
sites - while saying simultaneously that they could not be identified. The
Canadian expert Rosalie Bertell had advised the BTF to take samples from
the air filters of vehicles in Kosovo, from armoured tanks that had been
struck and from sites likely to have been affected by DU weapons; but no
such samples were taken while the teams were in the field.

Throughout this time a whole procession of people directly involved in the
question came to Geneva. The HCR's special envoy to the Balkans, Dennis
McNamara, spoke of refugees returning to a "secure environment". But by
"secure" he meant "militarily secure", stressing at a press conference at
the Palais des Nations on 12 July last year Nato's assurances that
depleted uranium posed no problems. US under-secretary of state for
population, refugees and migration Julia Taft came to Geneva to boast to
the UN Economic and Social Council of the success of this "humanitarian
war"; she admitted during another press conference (Palais des Nations, 14
July 1999) that she did not know what depleted uranium was.

IAEA spokesman David Kyd claimed in an interview that his agency's mandate
did not allow it to investigate DU, saying that it was, in any case,
perfectly harmless. Dr Keith Baverstock of the WHO regional office for
Europe came out with the same weasel words about there being absolutely no
danger, though he added that depleted uranium could cause problems in a
battle situation. Finally, former Swedish prime minister Carl Bildt, now
the UN Secretary General's special envoy to the Balkans, abruptly stated
that depleted uranium was a "non-issue".

Last March the Military Toxics Project, an American anti-nuclear NGO,
announced that Nato had, that January, sent the UNEP a map of targets
affected by depleted uranium in Kosovo; and this was confirmed by a source
at the Netherlands foreign ministry (13). Fearing a general outcry,
Toepfer convened a crisis meeting in Geneva on 20 March to decide on a
strategy. But he was too late. Switzerland's last independent French
language newspaper, Courrier, published the map that same morning.

The next day Haavisto held a press conference. Although he tried to be
reassuring, he referred to the recommendations of the October report -
that contaminated sites should be cordoned off - while adding that the map
available was not accurate enough to identify them. A press release
referred to the WHO study that was still being prepared and another
commissioned by the BTF from the UK's Royal Society (that has not been
heard of since).

The map, purportedly showing the 28 sites affected by 30 mm anti-tank
Penetrator missiles launched from A-10 aircraft, raised a number of
questions. The targets were concentrated close to the Albanian border
(areas occupied by Italian and German forces) where former Yugoslav leader
Tito, fearing the irredentism of the then Albanian dictator Enver Hoxha,
had built substantial concrete military installations underground.
According to Swiss military analyst Jacques Langendorf, who visited the
area in Tito's days, 30 mm Penetrators would have little impact on the
concrete, but DU-reinforced Cruise missiles might be effective. And
according to British analyst Dennis Flaherty, one of the aims of the war
was to test such missiles equipped with a new technology (known as Broach)
allowing as many as ten Penetrators to be fired at a time in order to
penetrate underground bunkers more effectively.

Following insistent demands from UN Secretary General Kofi Annan, Nato
gave Toepfer a new map in July last year. It showed 112 targets and had a
list of the munitions supposedly released there. For about 20 sites, the
type of munitions was given as "unknown", which seems unlikely given the
computer tracking systems available to Nato and the Pentagon. Apparently
the map was kept from Haavisto until September. When he discovered it, he
wanted to send a team of investigators to Kosovo straight away. Toepfer
apparently vetoed such a move before the 24 October elections, fearing a
massive exodus like the one during the war if worrying findings were made.

Whatever the case may be, tired of waiting for the WHO, the High
Commission for Refugees has drawn up its own instructions for its staff
(14): no pregnant woman will be sent to Kosovo, anyone approached about
going there must have the option of being posted elsewhere, and any
official sent to Kosovo must have his file marked "service in the field"
to facilitate any claim for compensation in the event of illness resulting
from contamination. According to Frederick Barton, deputy high
commissioner for refugees, the HCR's efforts to draw the civilian
population's attention to the risks of contamination met with tremendous
resistance both from Albanian politicians and from Nato and Unmik (UN
Mission in Kosovo) administrators.

For Rosalie Bertell, the "non-issue" of depleted uranium is just the
latest episode in a long story that is far from over. Watch this space.

mango
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the effing article - part5 - references

16.02.2001 12:59

(1) " Fact sheet No. 257, Depleted Uranium ", 12 January 2001, World
Health Organisation (WHO), Geneva.

(2) Taken from his monograph " Radiation Induced Cancer from Low-Dose
Exposure " and quoted in an open letter dated 11 May 1999 signed John W
Gofman, MD, PhD.

(3) "Effects of Radiation on Human Heredity: Report of a Study Group
convened by WHO together with Papers Presented by Various Members of the
Group", WHO, Geneva, 1957.

(4) Agreement between the International Atomic Energy Agency and the World
Health Organisation, approved by the 12th World Health Assembly on 28 May
1959 in resolution WHA12.40. World Health Organisation, Basic Documents,
42nd edition, World Health Organisation, Geneva, 1999.

(5) Rosalie Bertell, " The Hazards of Low Level Radiation",
 http://ccnr.org/bertell_book.html.

(6) "A-bomb survivors: factors that may lead to a re-assessment of the
radiation hazard", International Journal of Epidemiology, Volume XXIX, No.
4, Oxford University Press, Oxford 2000, pp 708-714.

(7) Including Wings of Death : Nuclear Pollution and Human Health,
Aberystwyth, Green Audit 1995.

(8) Jay M Gould, director, and Benjamin A Goldman, assistant director,
Overview: Deadly Deceit, Low-Level Radiation, High-Level Coverup,
Radiation and Public Health Report, New York, December 1989.

(9) Bakary Kante, Senior Policy Advisor to the Executive Director of ENUP,
"United Nations Inter-Agency Needs Assessment Mission to the Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia: Environment and Human Settlements Aspects", United
Nations, May 1999.

(10) "Assessment of the Environmental Impact of Military Activities During
the Yugoslavia Conflict: Preliminary Findings", June 1999, prepared by the
Regional Environmental Centre for Central and Eastern Europe, Szentendre,
Hungary, for the European Commission DG-XI - Environment, Nuclear Safety
and Civil Protection (Contract No B7-8110/99/61783/MAR/XI.1).

(11) "The Kosovo Conflict: Consequences for the Environment & Human
Settlement", United Nations Environment Programme and United Nations
Centre for Human Settlements, Geneva, 1999.

(12)  http://www.grid.unep.ch/btf/pressreleases/unep21032000.html and
 http://balkans.unep.ch/du/du.html

(13) See maps on Le Monde diplomatique's site.

(14) File of instructions of the HCR personnel department.

mango
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Suckers!

19.02.2001 15:19

To answer the question, "how can the 'forces of law and order' condone the blatant crimes of those who give them their orders." Because we are portrayed as heroes and have the added incentive of more power, privilege and exemption from crime ourselves. Isn't it great?

PC. Murphy