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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: The
Balkan Crisis
Yugoslavia estimates $100 billion in damages from NATO bombing
By Peter Stavropoulos
20 May 1999
The Yugoslav government has released preliminary data on the
damage caused to the country during the first 27 days of NATO's
air bombing campaign. The government figures, which do not include
deaths or casualties suffered by Yugoslav military personnel,
give a glimpse into the widespread devastation that has been inflicted
upon one of Europe's poorest countries.
Despite the damage and misery suffered by the Yugoslav people
during the first month of NATO's campaign, NATO has continued
to intensify its bombing, utilizing more military hardware and
expanding its use of bases into Turkey and even proposing to now
use bases in Hungary to further expand its attacks. According
to Yugoslav government estimates, NATO had launched over 7,000
attacks, including the firing of 2,000 cruise missiles and the
dropping of 6,000 tons of explosives on a nation which is similar
in size and population to that of the US state of Ohio.
These attacks led to the deaths of nearly 500 civilians and
a further 4,000 were seriously injured. Hundreds of thousands
of people also face health problems after being exposed to poisonous
gases as a result of the bombings. One million people were immediately
confronted with water shortages due to NATO's attack on the country's
water supply network.
The destruction of industrial facilities has led to 500,000
workers being left jobless, with a further 2 million people affected
by this loss of employment. It is estimated that over $10 billion
in damage had been caused in the initial stages of NATO's campaign.
NATO has deliberately targeted both industrial and civil facilities,
which included during the first 27 days: aircraft, pharmaceutical,
appliance, electrical, chemical, tobacco, tubes, plastics, rail,
hydro-construction, printing, shoe, automobile, machine, cotton
yarn and surface coal mining. Some of the bombings were carried
out during working hoursat the Zastava auto
plant in Kragujevac, Yugoslavia's fourth largest city, 120 workers
were wounded during a NATO attack. The bombing has also devastated
small businesses. Over 250 commercial and craft shops in Djakovica
alone were damaged.
Refineries and warehouses storing liquid raw materials and
chemicals have been destroyed, contaminating several thousand
hectares of fertile soil, rivers and lakes, as well as polluting
the air. Those attacked include: nine fuel storage/warehouses,
two oil refineries, a service station, a chemical plant, a fertilizer
plant, a thermo-electric power station and the petrochemical industry
in Pancevo, which was demolished.
Four agricultural complexes had been attacked and 250 hectares
of land had been burnt down due to forest fires begun by bombings.
The sea port of Bogojevo was also attacked.
Sixteen hospitals and healthcare centers were hit, some partially
damaged and others destroyed. A total of 190 schools had been
damaged, including 20 faculties, 6 colleges, 40 secondary schools,
80 elementary schools and 6 student dormitories. The number of
schools damaged would be the same as if every college, university,
technical and community school in Ohio were attacked.
Further damage to Yugoslavia's infrastructure included the
destruction of one bridge and damage to another thirteen. Twelve
rail lines had been destroyed, as well as three railway stations.
Six major roads and highways had also been cut due to the bombing.
Two bus stations had been destroyed, as well as a hangar full
of new buses. In the Leskovac region alone over 3,500 industrial
facilities and dwellings had been destroyed or damaged.
Seven airports had been attacked and damaged and several thousand
private houses across Yugoslavia were either destroyed or damagedespecially
housing blocks in the cities of Aleksinac and Pristina.
Public facilities and government buildings that had been damaged
or destroyed include the Republican and Federal Ministry of the
Interior in Belgrade; Security of the Ministry of the Interior
and Hydro-Meteorological Station, both in Banjica; the TV-RTS
studio, post office and refugee center, all in Pristina. The Tornik
ski resort, the Divcibare mountain resort and the Baciste Hotel
were also attacked. The city power plant in Krusevac and the Meteorological
Station on Mt. Kopaonik had also been hit, and heavy damage was
inflicted on four libraries in Rakovica. The refugee camp in Paracin
was also attacked.
Infrastructure damage was also caused to Batajnica's electrical
power supply, Zemun's water supply, Bogutovac's power station
and telephone lines, Pristina's power station and Polinje's hydroelectric
power station. Across Yugoslavia 17 telecommunication and TV transmitters
were attacked.
Religious sites and buildings were not spared from NATO's bombing.
Nine monasteries were damaged, many built between the twelfth
and seventeen centuries. Four churches were damaged, as were religious
monuments. A memorial complex was destroyed and two cemeteries
also suffered damage; eight historical monuments and museums were
also attacked.
The latest figures for overall damage caused by NATO were presented
on May 17 by the Yugoslav authorities to a United Nations mission
which visited Belgrade. Damage caused directly by NATO's bombing
is now estimated to be over $100 billion. More than 1,200 civilians
are confirmed dead and over 5,000 have been wounded. Since the
air attacks began more than 160,000 inhabitants of Kosovo and
Metohija have been made refugees. These include ethnic Albanians
and Turks, Serbs and Montenegrins.
The United Nations mission includes the UN's senior policy
advisor for Environmental Programs and it has begun to investigate
the environmental and long-term impact on Yugoslavia from NATO's
bombing. The team is due to visit the Pancevo complex, a southern
suburb of Belgrade where NATO's repeated bombing of an oil refinery,
petrochemical and fertilizer plants has resulted in the release
of large amounts of chemicals into the Danube river, the largest
and most important river in Yugoslavia.
When the industrial complex was first hit in mid-April, carcinogenic
matter over Pancevo was measured at 7,200 times above the level
considered safe as phosgene gas, chlorine and hydrochloric acid
were also released into the air and soil. The effects of this
will be felt downstream of the Danube river into Romania, Bulgaria
and then into the Black Sea. Southern Europe's groundwater supply
is also at risk of contamination due to seepage into the soil.
The UN team is also due to visit Baric and the third largest
city, Nis, where the continued bombing of industrial areas has
led to the release of dioxins into the atmosphere. Levels of dioxins,
a group of chemicals which are the most toxic poisons known to
man, are reported to have increased by fifteen times over Yugoslavia
since NATO's bombing campaign began.
Supplemental data also shows that NATO has been using ammunitions
containing depleted uranium, a waste product of the uranium enrichment
process. Similar uranium depleted rockets were fired during the
1991 Gulf War against Iraq, and the radioactive waste released
that contaminates the human body is being investigated as a possible
cause for severe health problems suffered by many Gulf War veterans.
Once exploded, the rockets release uranium oxide into the air.
The use of such weapons in southern Iraq during the Gulf War has
led to a dramatic increase in stillbirths, birth defects and childhood
leukemia's as well as other cancers in the area. Tests have shown
that enhanced radiation levels in the atmosphere and soil in Kosovo
have already been measured.
A press conference held Tuesday by the Union of Greek Scientists
warned of the serious long-term damage created by the NATO bombing.
Its president, Nicholas Katsaros, said it is not possible to yet
determine whether the land in Yugoslavia could ever be farmed
again. So great is the contamination of the soil that Greek scientists
also believe the environmental damage is irreversible.
These figures can only begin to paint an overview of the widespread
suffering that has been caused by the NATO bombing, and the consequences
for decades to come for the people of the Balkans.
See Also:
After Korisa bomb atrocity
The evolution of a NATO lie
[17 May 1999]
NATO cluster bombs kill 100 Albanians
in Kosovo: Where is the outrage?
[15 May 1999]
What really has happened in Kosovo
[14 May 1999]
War in
the Balkans
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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