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Re: NATO admits it used depleted uranium in Kosovo
Please, WHAT is the big fuss about DU in weapons? When one is getting
shelled, it seems to me that the last thing one worries about is heavy metal
poisoning or radiation damage.
Ruth F. Weiner, Ph. D.
7336 Lew Wallace NE
Albuquerque, NM
505-856-5011
fax 505-856-5564
ruth_weiner@msn.com
ruth_weiner@ymp.gov
-----Original Message-----
From: Sandy Perle <sandyfl@earthlink.net>
To: Multiple recipients of list <radsafe@romulus.ehs.uiuc.edu>
Date: Wednesday, March 22, 2000 8:54 AM
Subject: NATO admits it used depleted uranium in Kosovo
>NATO admits it used depleted uranium in Kosovo
>
>GENEVA, March 21 (Reuters) - NATO has admitted using depleted uranium
>weapons in Kosovo, exposing civilians, its own troops and aid workers
>to health hazards, a U.N. expert said on Tuesday.
>
>But Pekka Haavisto, head of the U.N. Balkan environment task force
>investigating the use of munitions during the 70-day war, said NATO
>was still holding back crucial data on where and how it used depleted
>uranium weapons, which can contaminate land and water sources with
>radioactive and toxic particles.
>
>The former Finnish environment minister said NATO's confirmation of
>its use of depleted uranium came in a letter from the Western
>military alliance's Secretary-General George Robertson to U.N.
>Secretary-General Kofi Annan.
>
>In its letter, Haavisto said NATO disclosed having used 31,000 rounds
>of depleted uranium ammunition during some 100 missions throughout
>Kosovo by U.S. A-10 aircraft.
>
>``It was really the Americans who were using depleted uranium in
>NATO,'' Haavisto said. ``The question we now have today is whether it
>was also used in Serbia and Montenegro and other areas.''
>
>Haavisto accused the alliance of obstructing his team's work late
>last year by refusing to cooperate to help determine the extent of
>pollution caused by such weapons.
>
>Accompanying the letter was a NATO map with areas marked where NATO
>said it had used depleted uranium weapons. Shells are tipped with
>depleted uranium to help them penetrate the thick armour of military
>vehicles or underground bunkers.
>
>The marked areas were concentrated in Kosovo's west and southwest,
>close to the zones where Italian as well as German, Turkish and Dutch
>KFOR troops are based.
>
>Depleted uranium-tipped weapons were used west of the Pec-Dakovica-
>Prizren highway, around the town of Klina, around Prizren and north
>of Suva Reka and Urosevac, Haavisto said.
>
>``We can see from the map that depleted uranium was widely used in
>Kosovo. These were populated areas so the risks are greater,''
>Haavisto said.
>
>``Many missions using depleted uranium also took place outside these
>areas,'' he added. ``If these types of weapons were used, people
>should have been protected and warned against the risks of
>toxication, especially children.''
>
>U.N. DEMANDS MORE INFORMATION FROM NATO
>
>Haavisto said NATO information was not detailed enough for experts to
>do field assessment on health effects and measurements on possible
>contamination of land and ground water.
>
>``The information provided by NATO and the map is not precise enough
>for a field assessment. We were not given the information we needed
>from NATO. We are in need of precise information on exact locations
>where depleted uranium was used,'' he said.
>
>NATO officials were not immediately available for comment.
>
>Haavisto said the use of depleted uranium in Kosovo was only one-
>tenth of that in the 1991 Gulf War against Iraq -- after which there
>was an epidemic of cancers among Iraqis living near battlefields.
>
>U.S. and British veterans of the Gulf War with Iraq have also blamed
>serious health problems among them on the use of such weapons. The
>link is denied by U.S. and British military authorities.
>
>Haavisto said the World Health Organisation had promised to report on
>the effects on health of medium and long-term exposure to depleted
>uranium in Kosovo in May.
>
>But the U.N. health agency has yet to produce a similar and equally
>controversial report demanded by Iraq over two years ago on health
>effects of depleted uranium used during the Gulf War.
>
>------------------------------------------------------------------------
>Sandy Perle Tel:(714) 545-0100 / (800) 548-5100
>Director, Technical Extension 2306
>ICN Worldwide Dosimetry Division Fax:(714) 668-3149
>ICN Biomedicals, Inc. E-Mail: sandyfl@earthlink.net
>ICN Plaza, 3300 Hyland Avenue E-Mail: sperle@icnpharm.com
>Costa Mesa, CA 92626
>
>Personal Website: http://www.geocities.com/capecanaveral/1205
>ICN Worldwide Dosimetry Website: http://www.dosimetry.com
>
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