Earth Watch Report - Environmental Pollution
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Environment Pollution | Iraq | Province of Missan, [Karima village area] |
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US allegedly poisoned Iraqi village with lethal radioactive material - local official
© Photo: Voice of Russia/Michael Shepetkov
The official environmental authority in the Iraqi governorate of Missan, located 390 kilometers away from Baghdad, has discovered radioactive material attributed to the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq, Global Research reports. The director of the general authority for the environment, Samir Kadim, explained that dangerous contamination was found in military equipment left at a small village south of Karima that saw severe fighting between the Iraqi army and the US-led coalition forces in 2003.
Kadim laments that
the contamination was not discovered soon after the military operation
ended. Since then several people have been diagnosed with various
serious diseases, from cancer to birth defects. "Unfortunately, we have
discovered it late, after a number of the village’s residents have been
diagnosed with various diseases."
Many need professional medical help only available abroad. Some succumbed to the disease without receiving any treatment.
Abboud
Moussa told the New Arab: "Cancer has spread among us, in addition to
birth defects among new-born babies and other diseases that doctors
cannot explain."
"But it is only now that we have discovered the cause – it is the US."
Reportedly, this is the third case that radioactive material has been discovered in that area.
The
village's mayor Mahmoud Abtan told the New Arab that a routine visit to
the village by officials from the Ministry of Environment encouraged
the villagers to ask them to examine a number of areas that had a bad
smell. "A number of animals grazing near those areas have died … people
even thought that those areas were possessed. Then it turned out that
they are not possessed at all, and our murderer is the US," he said, as
quoted by the Global Research.
Abdel Khalek Mahmoud, an
environmental expert, told the New Arab that allegedly depleted uranium
was used in Iraq by the US in 2003. "This is abundantly found and it has
caused a lot of lethal damage in the country."
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nuclear-news
USA, UK, France will not admit the growing radioactive pollution of Iraq, due to depleted uranium weapons
The health effects are disputed by the US and UK governments, who joined with France and Israel to vote against a resolution calling for “a precautionary approach” to the use of DU weapons at the United Nations general assembly in December; 155 countries voted in favour of the resolution.Iraq’s depleted uranium clean-up to cost $30m as contamination spreads Rob Edwards guardian.co.uk, 6 March 2013 Report says toxic waste is being spread by scrap metal dealers, and describes its ‘alarming’ use in civilian areas during Iraq wars Cleaning up more than 300 sites in Iraq still contaminated by depleted uranium (DU) weapons will cost at least $30m, according to a report by a Dutch peace group to be published on Thursday.
The report, which was funded by the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, warns that the contamination is being spread by poorly regulated scrap metal dealers, including children. It also documents evidence that DU munitions were fired at light vehicles, buildings and other civilian infrastructure including the Iraqi Ministry of Planning in Baghdad – casting doubt on official assurances that only armoured vehicles were targeted. “The use of DU in populated areas is alarming,” it says, adding that many more contaminated sites are likely to be discovered.
More than 400 tonnes of DU ammunition are estimated to have been fired by jets and tanks in the two Iraq wars in 1991 and 2003, the vast majority by US forces. The UK government says that British forces fired less than three tonnes.
DU is a chemically toxic and radioactive heavy metal produced as wasteby the nuclear power industry. It is used in weapons because it is an extremely hard material capable of piercing armour.
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