-Caveat Lector-

  Cancer blinds Kosovo veterans

Serb soldiers fear after-effects of exposure to Nato's
depleted uranium shells

Jonathan Steele in Belgrade
Monday January 22, 2001

Serbian doctors have found cancerous tumours in the
eyes of two ex-soldiers who served with the Yugoslav
army in areas of Kosovo where Nato fired shells
containing depleted uranium last year.
"I have always had perfect eyesight and there is no
history of cancer in my family," a diconsolate Milan
Bisercic told the Guardian yesterday in the Belgrade
hospital where he sat with a bandage round his head,
covering the socket where his right eye used to be.

"A surgeon took it out on Thursday, the day after I
was rushed here. I noticed my sight was going funny in
December. It got steadily worse and in 25 days the
right eye was virtually blind," he explained.

Still stunned by his sudden disability, he declined to
be photographed.

In a neighbouring ward is Stanisa Zivkovic, another
veteran of the Kosovo war whose sight has been struck
by an unexplained cancer. Both men served in Urosevac
in central Kosovo, one of 112 sites that Nato
confirmed recently had been targeted by American
planes using DU munitions.

The two men are the first confirmed cases of cancer
among Kosovo veterans from the Yugoslav army, although
there is no proof that their illnesses were caused by
radiation from DU. Like Nato governments, the Yugoslav
army has been trying to play down the effect of DU
exposure on its soldiers.

The Milosevic regime, which was ousted last autumn,
made a great propaganda play about Nato's use of DU,
describing it as a war crime. But it never admitted
that any civilian or soldier had been found with
suspected radiation-caused illnesses.

The army checked 1,100 of the more than 100,000
soldiers who served in Kosovo, according to a senior
medical source at Belgrade's military academy
hospital, and says it found no problems.

"But the question is what kind of examination did they
perform and what specialised equipment did they use,"
the Yugoslav army doctor said yesterday. He was not
part of the team which checked the men.

A Belgrade weekly tabloid, Nedeljni Telegraf, reported
last week that three officers from the Pristina Corps
died of leukaemia in recent months and 10 other
soldiers are ill with the disease; four of them
terminally.

They were all stationed near Prizren, in areas of
western Kosovo where Nato dropped many DU weapons
because of a large concentration of tanks and armoured
vehicles. They were deployed to prevent the Kosovo
Liberation Army moving men in from Albania.

One man who died earlier this month was a member of
the personal escort team for General Nebojsa Pavkovic,
who commanded Yugoslav land forces in Kosovo
throughout the war, according to the newspaper. The
general is currently Yugoslav chief of staff.

The newspaper did not name any of the sick or dead
veterans, and the Yugoslav army has denied the report.

While refusing so far to confirm any link between DU
and sickness among soldiers and civilians since the
Kosovo war, the authorities were quicker than Nato in
ordering measures to protect people.

After reports in Italy and Portugal at the beginning
of this month exposed unex plained cancer deaths among
Nato soldiers, international peacekeepers only began
last week to use warning tape to seal off sites in
Kosovo where DU struck.

"We were asked to go down to southern Serbia long
ago," Snezhana Pavlovic, the head of the radiation and
environmental protection department at Yugoslavia's
Vinca Institute of Nuclear Science, said. "Of course
we have no access to Kosovo where most of the DU was
used. But seven sites were struck in southern Serbia.
We checked them for radiation and ruled out three. The
other four contaminated areas have been sealed off."

Her team retrieved parts of DU-tipped shells from
fields and hillsides. "Nato says it fired up to 3,000
DU rounds in southern Serbia. So far we've only found
fragments from 100 shells," she said. "We are still
trying to check the area more precisely."

Back in his hospital ward in Belgrade, Mr Bisercic
recalls seeing the repeated Nato attacks on the
barracks at Urosevac during his two months in Kosovo
last year. He and other members of his scout unit were
living in Albanian houses whose owners had fled or
been expelled.

"I was never closer than 500 metres to the explosions,
so I don't know why I should have got radiated more
than anyone else, if that was what gave me cancer," he
said.

"The surgeon said he could not prove the cause was DU.
Until I read about it in the papers last week, I had
never heard of DU."

A 36-year-old reserve officer from Brus, Mr Bisercic
was called up and sent to Kosovo about a month after
Nato started its bombing campaign.

The father of two used to work in a tractor factory in
Krusevac. "My job involved using an oxyacetylene
cutter on metal. I asked the surgeon if that could
have caused the tumour," he said helplessly. "He
thought it was impossible. So now I just don't know
why I've lost my eye."

•The head of the Greek Orthodox church, Archbishop
Christodoulos, yesterday accused Nato of creating
"ruins and catastrophes" in Kosovo. During a sermon
after a one-day trip to visit Greek peacekeepers, the
archbishop, an outspoken critic of the war, claimed
the Nato attacks had destroyed life for Christian
Orthodox Serbs in the province.

Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2001


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