-Caveat Lector-

> > The Sunday Herald (Scotland)
> > 15 April 2001
> >
> > Global spread of DU reaches food chain
> > By Torcuil Crichton and Felicity Arbuthnot
> > Publication Date: Apr 15 2001
> > Depleted uranium from shells fired by British and
> > American forces during the Balkan wars has found its
> > way into the food chain and has been detected among
> > the civilian populations of Kosovo and Bosnia.
> > A study of the local population in three locations in
> > the two Balkan regions has found samples of the highly
> > radio active particles in the urine of all those
> > tested.
> > The investigation comes amid growing concern about the
> > possible effects of depleted uranium in the Balkans
> > both on foreign troops and on the local population.
> > A survey for the Sunday Herald has found that
> > depleted-uranium weaponry has been used or tested in
> > 41 countries worldwide. They range from Britain -
> > where DU shells are test-fired on the Solway Firth -
> > to Japan, where unauthorised firing by the United
> > States military led to a massive clean-up operation.
> > Eleven of the countries affected by DU are in the
> > Balkans.
> > Nato warplanes dropped 10,000 rounds of DU ammunition
> > in Bosnia in 1994 and 1995. Soldiers from several
> > troop-contributing countries - including Italy,
> > Portugal and France - have fallen ill with what is
> > being called Balkan syndrome but this is the first
> > time that the civilian population has been tested for
> > contamination.
> > Spain has reported at least eight cases of cancer
> > among personnel deployed in Bosnia and Kosovo.
> > Belgium, France, Germany, Greece, Italy and Poland are
> > among other countries to have acknowledged a problem.
> > There was an outcry in Portugal when Hugo Paulino, a
> > young corporal, died of cancer three weeks after
> > returning from duty in Kosovo.
> > The health of returning Italian personnel was of such
> > concern that five different regions have appointed
> > senior judiciary to open inquiries.
> > The civilian study was carried out by Professor Nick
> > Priest of Middlesex University, for E rpa, BBC
> > Scotland's European-affairs programme. It looked at
> > people in one location in Bosnia and two locations in
> > Kosovo.
> > "So far, all the results for every single one of the
> > samples collected in Kosovo is showing some depleted
> > uranium in the urine," he said. "That is completely
> > abnormal because normally you would expect no DU to be
> > in the urine samples."
> > Priest's conclusion was that it was likely that the
> > metal was present in the food chain. The study did not
> > investigate possible health problems.
> > Previous studies have found no evidence of a link,
> > although a recent United Nations report acknowledged
> > that there remain "considerable scientific
> > uncertainties".
> > Despite that concern, a proposed voluntary testing
> > programme for Kosovan civilians has been shelved
> > following the intervention of the World Health
> > Organisation.
> > Campaigners against the use of DU, which will remain
> > radioactive for four-and-a-half billion years, argue
> > the tiny particles of DU dust emitted from shell
> > explosions will still be mutating genetics of fauna,
> > flora and humanity "when the sun goes out". Teenager
> > Vlora Marleku told the programme makers: "I am
> > worried. I don't know what to say. This is something
> > that touches you very deeply."
> > Civilian populations and refugees returning to the
> > Balkans are also experiencing severe health problems,
> > according to local reports.
> > Journalist Svetlana Stankovic Lala of Greece's Athens
> > News said: "In Kosovska Mitrovica, [in the] north of
> > Kosovo, the number of malignant diseases increased
> > 200% in 2000 compared to 1998, the year before the
> > bombing."
> > Doctors in the area estimate that birth deformities
> > have increased by 250% over 1998 figures.
> > Dr Aleksandra Veljovic, of the Cancer Foundation in
> > Yugoslavia, talked of "a doubling of incidence of
> > cancer" by June 2000 - exactly a year after the war's
> > end.
> > In January 2000, she said, "almost 2000 people died
> > from a flu pandemic, corpses [remained unburied] for
> > 10 or more days and in numbers from pneumonia".
> > Like Iraq, medication and facilities were unavailable
> > due to sanctions. Like Iraq, an epidemic occurred
> > shortly after the bombing. In Iraq, at least 5000
> > people died of measles within months of the end of the
> > Gulf war. Radiation damages the immune system - a link
> > that the Gulf veterans have made with their proven
> > immune deficiencies.
> > No studies have been made in bordering countries,
> > although there are concerns that radiation travels via
> > the wind, water and fauna.
> > An A-10 Thunderbolt, which carries DU weapons, crashed
> > in Albania. A missile thought to be carrying DU landed
> > in Bulgaria. Another landed in Macedonia, which has
> > hosted nearly one million refugees and has already
> > removed 10 tonnes of DU-contaminated topsoil from its
> > border region.
> > Britain's Ministry of Defence insisted that the levels
> > of depleted uranium found in the tests for the E rpa
> > programme posed no risk to public health and represent
> > only a tiny fraction of naturally occurring background
> > radiation. Defence minister Dr Lewis Moonie said: "It
> > is a very interesting result and one that needs to be
> > followed up."
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Ray Bristow [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> > Sent: Sunday, April 15, 2001 4:17 AM
> > To: Ray Bristow
> > Subject: [DU-WATCH]
> >
> >
> >
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: "farbuthnot" To: Cc: >
> > Sent: Sunday, April 15, 2001 9:14 AM
> > Subject: DU
> >
> >
> > For info www.sundayherald.com   15th April '01 - listed under
> > 'News' -
> > 'Global Spread of DU Reaches Food Chain.'Best, felicity. With
> > thanks to
> > Chris Williams for a wonderful quote: 'still be (polluting) when
> > the sun
> > goes out' surely one for demo banners .... either I'm being thick
> > again or
> > it won't download to paste!
> >
> >
> >
> >
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> >
> >
> >
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> >
> >
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> >
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> >
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> >
> >
>

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