“Protecting” Libyans with a silent killer
        

                
                        

                


Published: 12 April, 2011, 09:39

Edited: 13 April, 2011, 00:36

        

        


        
        
                
                        
                
                “Protecting” Libyans with a silent killer
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                TRENDS:
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                Libya's Odyssey Dawn

        

        
                


        
        



        


                With the Libyan rebels rejecting an African Union peace plan, 
there
 seems to be no end in sight for the conflict. The opposition is still 
relying on coalition forces to help its cause, but it seems they could 
prove more of a hindrance.

­It has been 
claimed the allies have used depleted uranium in their attacks – a 
substance which causes cancer and mutations in those affected.
Libyan
 rebels could be seen climbing on a tank to celebrate one of the 
coalition’s latest successful strikes, unaware of the silent killer they
 may have been breathing in. 
Gulf War veteran and depleted 
uranium expert Melissa Sterry believes the rebels on the tank would have
 been getting low-level radiation exposure.  
Though the 
western coalition denies using depleted uranium in bombings in the 
country, others say there is a good chance weapons with the highly 
poisonous radioactive element have been used. 
“With that 
kind of damage, there is a pretty good chance it was a DU [depleted 
uranium] round. I am about 80-90 per cent sure it was a DU round. That 
is very stupid… The level of the wind blowing, that means the particles …
 so all these people in the cars are exposed,” explains Sterry. 
Sterry
 served in the US military during the first Gulf War in the early 1990s,
 clearing-up battlefields in Kuwait. Back then the US dropped more than 
350 tons of depleted uranium over Kuwait and Iraq. The pictures of 
bombings in Libya seem all too familiar. 
“You see how there are touches of red?” Sterry says, watching footage of the 
bombings. 

“That
 is the burning. See how it shoots out instead of concentrated up and 
the flare at the bottom? That is a depleted uranium explosion.”
Depleted uranium in military terms is highly efficient – relatively cheap and 
powerful enough to penetrate the heaviest armor. 
NATO flatly denies its use in Libya. 
Even
 though the UN human rights commission has called for a ban, countries 
which have refused to sign up include the US, the UK, France and Israel.
Investigative journalist Dave Lindorff is not surprised by NATO’s denial of the 
use of depleted uranium in Libya.
“The
 only people who could blow the whistle would be the pilots and the 
people that are actually putting the ammunition onto the planes,” he said. 
“They are in the military, and they are not talking.”

The
 smallest particles of uranium, nanoparticles, are the most  dangerous. 
Once inhaled, they get into the blood and can spread into any  organ, 
including the heart, brain, liver. 

Once the particles penetrate  cell 
tissue, all kinds of genetic mutations can develop.  People in  Iraq, 
for example, breathe in the contaminated air every day. And  experts say
 there is no way to fight it. 
In the Iraqi city of  Fallujah,
 where the US dropped thousands of depleted uranium rounds  after the 
2003 invasion, a quarter of all babies are born with a range  of 
horrendous abnormalities. 
Higher rates of cancer, leukemia  
and infant mortality have been found there than in Hiroshima and  
Nagasaki after the atomic bombs were dropped. 
The US and the 
 British military admitted widespread use of depleted uranium in bombing
  Bosnia in 1995 – a legacy felt today with cancer and leukemia rates  
several times higher than normal among locals.  
 “We have
  got total medial confirmation all around Iraq that the effects of the 
 uranium are there. We see it throughout Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait,  
Afghanistan, Somalia, Balkans, now we see it moving into Libya,”  
says Doctor Doug Rokke. He was a leading specialist in the clean-up  
after the Gulf War and says there is no way of actually decontaminating 
 affected areas. 
“I was given a written memorandum to lie about the effect of depleted uranium,” 
claims Rokke. 
He himself was exposed to depleted uranium and has cancer. Almost all of the 
other members of his team are now dead.
The
  First Gulf War left one in four American soldiers disabled. Only 
around  260 veterans were tested for depleted uranium, out of almost 
700,000  deployed for the war. 
“Every time I asked to be tested for exposure to depleted uranium, people have 
refused to give me the test,” says Melissa Sterry.
Some
  fear that the suffering of those bombed – in areas where there are no 
 western troops – will go unnoticed. Depleted uranium has a half-life of
  4.5 billion years – hence its description by some as the silent killer
  that will never stop killing.
“This is forever, essentially,
  and the danger to it is because it’s very heavy, uranium is extremely 
 heavy. It sinks down low into the ground, and it gets into the water  
channels. So the problem will be that 20, 30 or 40 years from now,  
you’re going to have the steady leakage of both toxic metals and uranium
  into the water channels of these villages,” journalist Conn Hallinan told RT.
“There is essentially no defense against the depleted uranium shell,” he added.
  “So, of course, if you run a war, you want to have depleted uranium  
ammunition, and the US is now trading and selling it to a large number  
of its NATO allies and non-NATO allies, about 25 countries in the world.
  There are some countries that refuse to use it, for instance, Germany 
 and Italy, and Belgium is the first country to actually ban its use.”


        
        
                
http://rt.com/news/silent-killer-uranium-depleted/

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