-Caveat Lector-

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/World/Europe/2001-
01/uraniumfrt140101.shtml

Sick, bleeding and losing nails: the girl who played with Nato
uranium
By Robert Fisk in Bratunac, Bosnia
14 January 2001
Sladjana Sarenac remembers the pieces of a depleted-uranium
bomb that she picked up outside her home in Sarajevo. "It glittered
and I did what all children do," she says. "I was six years old and I
pretended to make cookies out of the bits of metal and the soil in
the garden. Then I hid the pieces on a shelf because my puppy
Tina was playing with it."
Sladjana is now 12 and has been seriously ill ever since. Her nails
have repeatedly fallen out of her fingers and toes. She has suffered
internal bleeding, constant diarrhoea and vomiting. When her Serb
parents fled their home in the Sarajevo suburb of Hadjici after the
Dayton Accord, she took her dog with her. It had three puppies.
Then Tina died. Then the puppies. Sladjana has a desperately pale
face and tired eyes.
Everyone tells her she will be all right. I tell her that too. Sladjana's
parents spend 450 German marks a month (£140) for her
medicines – she takes 2mg of Benesedin twice a day, 600mg of
magnesium tablets once a day – but the family are too poor to pay
the bills. In their refuge home in Bratunac the electricity has been
cut off. The landlady wants them out. And, needless to say, no one
from Nato has bothered to enquire about Sladjana's mysterious
sickness.
Nato's raids followed the shelling of the Sarajevo marketplace and
the Serb massacre of thousands of Muslim refugees in and around
Srebrenica. Sladjana did not see the American A-10 aircraft that
dropped the bombs around her home in the summer of 1995,
including the round that exploded on her family's small farm. She
was hiding downstairs. But her father Jovo watched the planes, so
low that he could see the pilot of each aircraft as they dived. "The
houses in our street were very close to a [Serb] army base which
made the bombing very intense," he says. "From 30 August to 15
September 1995, we not only got Nato bombings but also shells
fired by the [Nato] Rapid Reaction Force on Mount Igman. The
pilots were breaking the sound barrier and Sladjana never slept."
Sladjana's sickness yet again places a heavy onus upon Nato to
disclose all it knows about depleted uranium munitions and to start
an immediate investigation among Bosnian Serbs from Hadjici
about how those closest to the bombings in 1995 became so
frequently the victims of cancer and leukaemia. Nato has already
acknowledged that ingestion of DU particles in the immediate
aftermath of a bomb explosion can have a serious effect on health.
Here are civilians who clearly were only metres away from DU
explosions who are suffering a devastating incidence of cancer,
who would willingly speak to Nato investigators, but who Nato has
not made the slightest effort to talk to.
Jovo and his wife, Sretanka – and Sladjana herself – believe that
her fascination with the bomb parts was her undoing. "She was
playing with them like all children do," Sretanka says. "Out of
curiosity, we all went to see what it looked like after the bombings.
We went into the fields where the craters were. Then in the middle
of October Sladjana had this kind of yellow sand under the nails on
her hands and toes. Then the skin round the nails became red and
it hurt her a lot. She was upset, crying a lot, vomiting and suffering
diarrhoea."
That's when Sladjana began her calvary of hospitals; a clinic in
Sarajevo, a clinic in Bratunac, medical examinations in Belgrade.
Sretanka produces a wad of fading, thin carbon copies of typed
hospital reports. In a hospital at Blazuj, she was given two-days of
blood transfusions. Doctors told her she had somehow been
irradiated. Her fingernails and toenails fell out. She spent 30 hours
in a coma. "In the early stages, we didn't think it was anything to
do with the bombing," her father says. "Now we are aware of the
kind of bombs that were fired and of what happened to other people
from Hadjici." Up to 300 men, women and children who lived close
to the site of the bombings in 1995 have died of cancers and
leukaemia over the past five years.
It does occur to me – though I do not say so – that there are
doctors aplenty in S-For, the Nato force now controlling Bosnia.
And that those doctors must know all about depleted-uranium
munitions and its risks. I have a feeling they will not be visiting the
dark house in Bratunac where Sladjana lives.


--


The Marxist ideal is at last reached. We live, finally, in a classless society: No one 
has any class at all.
--Michael Kelly on "a culture . . . impossible to offend."

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