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Is
the destruction of hospitals and public health records a cover-up of
"depleted" uranium health impacts in Iraq?
A call for independent observers to document
possible low-level radiation sicknesses in Iraq from the use of
illegal depleted uranium weapons
April 25, 2003 - The unchecked looting of hospitals
and the destruction of nearly all of the Ministries and other
centers storing public health records has dismantled the public
health system in Iraq beyond recognition, and has puzzled the world
public.
Was this an operational failure, or a deliberately
staged event? To activists working on a campaign to permanently ban
the use of "depleted" uranium weapons, the destruction of hospitals
and baseline health data serves an obvious legal purpose. The
looting has made it impossible for hospitals to function at the
present time, and obstructs the ability to document or report
symptoms linked to the use of "depleted" uranium or other more
experimental weapons used by the U.S./U.K. military.
Furthering suspicions, the U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID) has hired the World Health
Organization (WHO) to identify the population's immediate health
needs, at a cost of $10 million. This raises concerns about a
conflict of interest. Any data-gathering of immediate health
impacts of "depleted" uranium is being paid for by the U.S., which
is the major entity potentially liable for costs relating to those
impacts. This conflict of interest could compromise the goals
of H.R. 1483, a bill introduced by U.S. Congressman Jim McDermott
(D-WA) requiring studies on the health effects of DU munitions.
The sights targeted for looting and burning
(Ministry of Planning, Information, Health, etc.) support
speculation that a concerted attempt has been made to destroy
crucial data. Heavy guarding of the Oil and Interior
Ministries by U.S. tanks and soldiers to prevent looting, and the
glaring absence of military guards at other public sites which were
looted and destroyed by fires, suggests further deliberate
destruction of the Iraqi infrastructure.
The data from pre-Gulf War II health records is
critical to establish a baseline showing increases in post-Gulf War
II levels of cancers and birth defects in Iraq. Predictably,
the direct bombing of cities in Gulf War II with "depleted" uranium
weapons will cause greater increases than in Gulf War I, where
"depleted" uranium weapons were used on battlefields south of Basra.
The increases in the amounts used and the targeting of cities will
accelerate the onset and intensify the numbers of illnesses and
deaths related to DU exposures.
"Depleted" uranium weaponry, cluster bombs, and fuel
air bombs have been declared to be in violation of international law
by the United Nations experts sitting on the UN Subcommission on the
Protection and Promotion of Human Rights. Reports and studies
from the UN Secretary General and the Subcommission followed reports
of high levels of cancers and birth defects after the introduction
in 1991 of "depleted" uranium weapons by the U.S. and U.K. during
the first Gulf War.
Attorney Karen Parker, who since 1996 has argued the
illegality of DU at the United Nations, states, "Since the United
Nations Subcommission first found that DU weaponry violated existing
law, the evidence against DU is even stronger. I have always
thought that the U.S. fought so hard to maintain the sanctions
regime against Iraq in part due to the need to cover up as much as
possible the effects of DU in Iraq. Now the destruction of
hospitals and the records compiled by Iraqi scientists on DU further
supports a conclusion that the goal of the U.S. is to cover up the
truth about DU. And as the International Committee of the Red
Cross has stated, it is the duty of the United States forces to
protect hospitals. The absolute failure to do so is a major
violation of the Geneva Conventions."
Leuren Moret, independent depleted uranium expert
and former scientist at the Livermore Nuclear Weapons Lab, comments
that the use of "depleted" uranium weaponry in the first Gulf War
broke a 46-year taboo against the military use of radiological
weapons on the battlefield. A month after the World Trade
Center disaster, the World Net Daily reported that in late September
2001, President G.W. Bush and Russian president Vladimir Putin
agreed that the U.S. could use tactical nuclear weapons in
Afghanistan while the Russians could employ nuclear weapons against
the Chechnyans. She notes that the U.S. has miniaturized
thermonuclear weapons in its arsenal to be used against bunkers and
other targets, but at this time their use is banned by Congress.
She commented that the use of depleted uranium in Gulf War I
"established a military precedent which could be used to facilitate
a transition into the use of 4th-generation nuclear weapons."
With H.R. 1483, a bill introduced by U.S.
Congressman Jim McDermott (D-WA) requiring studies on the health
effects of DU munitions, it becomes imperative for physicians to
work immediately to document any initial symptoms that humans will
display after being exposed to contamination from these radioactive
weapons. Sources indicate that in this recent conflict five
times the amount of "depleted" uranium was used by the U.S./U.K.
than in the previous Gulf War.
The "depleted" uranium in cruise missiles and other
weapons aerosolizes on impact, causing inhalation of large amounts
of superfine radioactive particles and sending tiny shards of
uranium through the body like a knife slicing through butter.
Initial symptoms will be mostly neurological, showing up as
headaches, weakness, dizziness, muscle fatigue, etc.
Long-term effects are cancers, birth defects, and
other radiation-related illnesses such as Chronic Fatigue Syndrome,
joint and muscle pain, rashes, neurological and/or nerve damage,
mood disturbances, infections, lung and kidney damage, vision
problems, autoimmune deficiencies, loss of feeling, etc.
In this second Gulf War, any troops with symptoms of
low-level radiation sickness will report to their units. Their
symptoms will be denied by the military to be linked to depleted
uranium exposure, because the U.S. policy is and has been to deny
that the DU weapons can cause sickness. Military and civilian
doctors were trained in Gulf War I to define neurological-type
sicknesses as post-traumatic stress disorder, and to leave
radioactive shrapnel in the bodies of the veterans. It can be
expected that the military will repeat this policy.
Doug Rokke, former head of the U.S. Army DU Project
who has been campaigning against the use of DU, reports that U.S.
troops are falling sick already with a series of Gulf War symptoms.
Philippa Winkler, a political analyst and longtime
anti-DU activist, calls for immediate independent studies. "It is
imperative that independent health scientists observe, test, and
interview Gulf War II soldiers, Iraqi citizens, Medical Doctors in
Iraq, journalists, human shields, and other volunteer personnel for
symptoms linked to depleted uranium exposure and the possible use of
exotic weapons."
URLs
E/CN.4/Sub.2/2002/38, 27 June 2002,
Human Rights and Weapons of Mass Destruction with indiscriminate
effect, or of a nature to cause superfluous injury or unnecessary
suffering. Working paper submitted to the UN Subcommission
on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights, by Yeung Sik Yuen,
in accordance with SCRes 2001/36
Letter to Congressman McDermott with declassified memo to Gen.
L.R. Groves 1943 + a blueprint for DU.
"People Are Sick Over There Already," an interview
with Doug Rokke:
http://www.tompaine.com/feature.cfm/ID/7570
"Death By Slow Burn - How America Nukes Its Own Troops - What
'Support Our Troops' Really Means" by Amy Worthington, The
Idaho Observer, April 16, 2003.
Looting Encouraged by U.S. Forces
"U.S. Forces Encourage Looting" by Ole Rothenburg in DAGENS
NYHETER, a Swedish Newspaper.
"U.S. Threatens Iraqi Scientists" by Islamonline.net.
"U.S. government implicated in planned theft of Iraqi artistic
treasures" by Ann Talbot of wsws.org.
"Americans defend two untouchable ministries from the hordes of
looters," by Robert Fisk, the Independent, April 14, 2003:
"WHO Gets $10 Million U.S. Grant for Health Program in Iraq - Will
identify population's immediate health needs, U.S.A. Aid says"
"U.S. rejects Iraq DU clean-up," March 14, 2003, by Alex Kirby,
BBC News Online environmental correspondent.
This press release was issued by the Association
of Humanitarian Lawyers, Inc., a non-governmental organization
accredited by the United Nations.
Contacts
For the Association of Humanitarian Lawyers, Inc.:
Karen Parker:
International Legal Expert on DU.
Philippa Winkler: Political Analyst, Editor, "Hidden
Casualties, the Environmental, Health and Political Consequences of
the Persian Gulf War" (1994, see amazon.com), and co-producer of the
video documentary "From Radioactive Mines to Radioactive Weapons"
For Scientists for Indigenous People:
Leuren Moret, President, independent scientist and depleted uranium
expert
leurendu@yahoo.com
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