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URL: http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/dec2002/yugo-d10.shtml
World Socialist Web Site www.wsws.org




WSWS : News & Analysis : Europe : The Balkans

Long-term environmental damage due to NATO bombing in Yugoslavia

By Tony Robson
10 December 2002

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The NATO bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999 breached international humanitarian law and
caused long-term environmental damage, a report by the American based research group,
Institute for Energy and Environmental Research (IEER), has found.

The IEER carried out a case study of two industrial facilities targeted by NATO in 
Operation
Allied Force. The Pancevo industrial complex, consisting of a petrochemical and 
fertiliser
plant as well as an oil refinery, is situated 20 kilometres (12 miles) from Belgrade. 
The
Zastava car plant in Kragujevac is 100 kilometres (60 miles) south of Belgrade.

The Pancevo plant stands at the confluence of the River Tamis and the Danube while
Zastava is located on the Lepenica River, a tributary of the Velika Morava, which in 
turn
meets the Danube 60 kilometres downstream. After the bombings, toxic chemicals gushed
into the waters of Europe’s second largest river. Civilians living near the plants 
became
vulnerable to major health risks from contamination of the atmosphere, food produced
locally and the water supply.

The authors caution, “As modern warfare becomes more technologically sophisticated and
targeting more precise, it is essential not to succumb to the idea that the damage on 
the
ground is also precise and limited. It may be in some cases, but precise bombing does 
not
always yield precise or limited damage. As this study indicates, the health and
environmental consequences of precision bombing can affect unborn generations far into
the future, even when the bombs are entirely successfully in finding their targets.”

The IEER chose the two facilities as case studies because NATO had carefully selected 
them
as targets. Pancevo and Kragujevac are two of four areas designated as environmental
“hotspots” by the international body charged with overseeing the post-war cleanup
operation, the United Nations Environmental Program Balkan Task Force (UNEP/BTF.) The
report’s pollution estimates are based largely upon surveys conducted by the UNEP/BTF 
in
the immediate aftermath of Operation Allied Force. The majority of the pollutants 
dealt with
in the report can be found in the Top Twenty Hazardous Substances listed by the Agency
for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR).

Pancevo

Three people were killed directly by NATO bombing of the industrial complex when it was
hit repeatedly during April 1999. The NIS Oil Refinery was the most heavily targeted 
and
was bombed as late as June.

The report concentrates on the major contamination by mercury and 1,2-dichlorethane.
Eight metric tonnes and 2,100 metric tonnes were released of the toxic chemicals
respectively. The former is known to cause brain and digestive disorders and lead to 
birth
defects, while the latter is classified as a probable human carcinogen and can attack 
the
nervous system. Both are known to percolate rapidly into the groundwater when released
into the soil, threatening the water supply. Until now only the mercury spill has 
received
immediate attention, as this is highly volatile and the vapours pose an immediate 
threat.
While large amounts of the contaminated soil have been removed, there is still a 
residual
amount that has entered the groundwater.

The report warns about the lack of action to clear up the 1,2-dichlorethane spill. 
Fifty
percent was released into the ground with the remainder in the plant’s waste channel. 
The
report explains, “The fact that the area of contamination has not really spread 1,2-
dichlorethane on the surface indicates that any movement from a surface spill would be
downward toward the [local] aquifer. As described earlier, once contamination has 
reached
the aquifer, it spreads horizontally in the direction of the groundwater flow” ( 
Precision
Bombing, Widespread Harm by Sriram Gopal and Nicole Deller, Institute for Energy and
Environmental Research, page.38).

The US Environmental Protection Agency’s regulation for the concentration of 1,2-
dichlorethane in drinking water is set at five micrograms per litre. The 
concentrations found
in the groundwater around Pancevo exceeded that by several thousand times in some
instances. This constitutes the main long-term threat in the area as the chemical has 
a half-
life of 30 years.

Additional sources of toxic pollutants in the area are those released by fires caused 
by
NATO bombing. At the petrochemical plant, 460 metric tonnes of vinyl chloride were
incinerated whilst 62,000 metric tonnes of oil and oil related products were burnt at 
the oil
refinery. The result was a release of hydrochloric acid fumes and nitrogen and sulphur
compounds, which cause respiratory problems. The report states that the fires at the 
oil
refinery probably released significant amounts of sulphur dioxide and nitrates, “These 
two
compounds are associated with acid rain that results from industrial activities.”

A reporter who visited the area noted, “The repeated air strikes on the industrial 
complex,
which covers several acres, culminated in three huge hits at 1.00 a.m. on April 18. The
bombs sent fireballs into the air and enveloped Pancevo in clouds of black smoke and 
milky
white gasses. Flames leapt from the facilities for 10 days.”

An estimated 1,500 tonnes of vinyl chloride, 3,000 times higher than permitted levels,
burned into the air or poured into the soil and river, according to municipal 
officials in
Pancevo. This has left the banks of the river edged with white foam that still clogs 
the
canals around the town. Huge quantities of other noxious chemicals burned or gushed out
of storage facilities, including an estimated 15,000 tonnes of ammonia, 800 tonnes of
hydrochloric acid, 250 tonnes of liquid chlorine, vast quantities of dioxin (a 
component of
Agent Orange and other defoliants) and 100 tonnes of mercury.

By the dawn of the night attack, dozens of people were hospitalised gasping for air, 
or were
temporarily blinded or unable to digest food, witnesses said. At its peak, on the 
night of
April 18, the number of people evacuated from the town and surrounding villages reached
80,000, approximately one-tenth of the population.

Kragujevac

The Zastava car plant in Kragujevac, a town with a population of 150,000, was bombed
twice, once on April 9 and again on April 12, 1999. It was hit with a dozen bombs. 
Before
the imposition of sanctions, this was one of the largest industrial plants in the 
whole of the
Balkans.

In an attempt to deter NATO air strikes, the workers and management at the plant issued
an open letter three days after Operation Allied Force began explaining that they were
forming a human shield around the site. NATO didn’t alter its plans and 124 people were
injured in the subsequent bombing.

In a further appeal the workers explained, “Tonight, the 9th of April, the Zastava 
factory
plants in Kragujevac were bombed. The live shield was broken through. This bombardment
has inflicted severe damage to the factory equipment and almost completely destroyed 
the
energy supply complex that served not only the Zastava factory, but also the heating 
needs
of the entire city of Kragujevac: its residential houses, schools, faculties, 
hospitals....” [
World Socialist Web Site, April 13, 1999 Workers at Serb car plant bombed by NATO make
appeal to world public, http:// www.wsws.org/articles/1999/apr1999/zast-a13.shtml]

The report concentrates on the dangers posed by the release of Polychlorinated 
Biphenyls
(PCBs), a mix of 209 individual chlorinated compounds generally used as coolants and
lubricants in transformers and other electrical equipment. Since 1977 their 
manufacture has
been stopped in the US because they are known to pose a severe health risk. According 
to
ATSDR, the discharge or accidental release of 1 pound or more of PCBs into the
environment should be reported immediately to the Environmental Protection Agency. It 
is a
probable human carcinogen and can cause endocrine disruption.

The power station, assembly line, paint shop and computer centre suffered either major
damage or total destruction. Two transformers were hit and leaked PCBs into the
surrounding area. From one transformer alone 1,400 litres of pyralene oil (transformer 
oil
composed of PCBs and another highly toxic substance, tricholrobenzenes, otherwise known
as “trike”) leaked into the floor and waste pits. Workers involved in the initial 
clean up did
not wear protective clothing and some were taken ill.

The transformer at the power station leaked unknown quantities of PCBs into the 
Lepenica
River via the sewage system. The gravel basin underneath the transformer was unable to
cope with the volume that was released and the concentrations of PCBs around the
rainwater drain were higher than inside the plant. The operation to remove the
contamination within the plant has largely been completed by UNEP/BTF, but the same
cannot be said about the drainage system outside. Flooding during July 1999 may have
spread pollutants in the waterways to nearby low- lying agricultural areas. Tests for 
PCB
contamination have not been conducted on the water wells on the shores of the Morava
River by either the city’s public health institute or UNEP/BTF.

The issue of adequate funding raises the question of liability for the damages, 
something
that NATO refuses to accept responsibility for. To make matters worse, other Balkan
countries are making compensation claims against Serbia. The report cites the fact that
Hungary has demanded that Serbia refund orders paid for in advance from the
petrochemical plants destroyed during the bombing.

Violation of international humanitarian law

NATO maintained that its military offensive against Yugoslavia was justified on 
humanitarian
grounds. However, the report questions the moral and legal authority of Operation 
Allied
Force. NATO’s military action did not comply with the Geneva Convention and the laws
protecting the lives of non-combatants adopted in 1949 and the two Additional Protocols
that became international law in 1978. Two years ago, Amnesty International (AI) found
NATO responsible for perpetuating war crimes after demonstrating that it had violated
these laws.

While the IEER estimate the number of civilians killed during Operation Allied Force 
at 500,
Christopher Layne writing for the Cato Institute estimates that between 1,200 and 2,000
civilians were killed.

As Operation Allied Force progressed, an increasing array of weaponry was used 
including
cluster bombs and missiles tipped with depleted uranium (DU). This was carried out 
under
the auspices of downgrading Yugoslavia’s military capability as the term “dual-use” was
stretched to efface any meaningful distinction between military and civilian 
installations. The
report cites several cases where existing international law on discriminating between 
the
former and the latter were ignored by NATO.

Apart from the oil refinery neither of the case studies in the report could qualify as 
playing a
critical role militarily. The Zastava car plant was not involved in arms production at 
the
time. Moreover, even where a military use can be proven this does not remove the need 
to
ensure that civilian fatalities are avoided.

The report notes that Article 35 of Additional Protocol I prohibits the use of 
weaponry “of a
nature to cause superfluous injury or unnecessary suffering” and “methods or means of
warfare which are intended, or may be expected, to cause widespread, long term and
severe damage to the natural environment.”

Of the 19 NATO countries that took part in the bombings, 16 have ratified Additional
Protocol I. Turkey has not, France did so only after the Operation Allied Force, while 
the US
was signatory to the treaty but did not ratify it. However, it did ratify the 1977 
Convention
on the Prohibition of Military or Any Other Hostile Use of Environmental Modification
Techniques (ENMOD). This came into effect after the Vietnam War and forbids the use of
the environment or environmental modification as a means of warfare. The bombings of
installations storing such large quantities of toxic substances amounted to a form of
chemical warfare.

NATO’s greatest crime was that against peace, the report continues. The bombing was in
breach of international law that only recognises military force as an act of 
self-defence. The
report cites the United Nations Charter Article I, paragraph I which explains that its 
main
objective is: “To maintain international peace and security, and to that end: to take
effective collective measures for the prevention and removal of threats to the peace, 
and
for the suppression of acts or other breaches of the peace, and to bring about by 
peaceful
means, and in conformity with the principles of justice and international law, 
adjustment or
settlement of international disputes or situations which might lead to a breach of the
peace.”

It was to circumvent opposition within the United Nations Security Council that America
launched its military offensive through NATO. At no stage can it be credibly argued 
that all
means towards a peaceful settlement in the Kosovo conflict had been exhausted, the 
report
insists.

The US committed over 700 of the 1055 aircraft used in Operation Allied Force and US
aircraft flew more than 29,000 of the 38,000 sorties flown during the campaign. 
However, it
is impossible to say whether it was US aircraft that bombed the facilities in Pancevo 
and
Kragujevac as this information has not been declassified. Attempts by IEER to obtain 
the
targeting criteria used during the bombings under the Freedom of Information Act was
rejected by the US Department of Defense, which handed over 42 blank pages marked
“classified”. An analysis of Yugoslav bombing campaign carried out this year by the US
General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress, remains classified as 
well.







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