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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Puerto
Rico
US Navy to be sued for depleted uranium use on Caribbean
island
By Harvey Thompson
21 February 2001
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The inhabitants of the Puerto Rican island of Vieques are to
take the United States Navy to court for compensation over a claim
that its use of depleted uranium (DU) shells has caused a cancer
epidemic.
DU is a highly toxic by-product of the enrichment of uranium
for the production of nuclear weapons and reactor fuel.
Over a third of the island's population of 9,000 are now suffering
from a range of cancers and other serious illnesses. By official
figures, the cases of cancer of the breast, cervix and uterus
have risen by 300 percent over the last 20 years. Many doctors
have linked the alarming rise in cancers to the decades-long use
of the island as a bombing range by the US Navy and to a lesser
extent by Britain's Royal Navy.
Vieques, which is 20 miles long by four miles wide (32km by
6.4km), is situated off the East Coast of the US commonwealth
island of Puerto Rico. Two thirds of the island is owned by the
US Navy, which has used it for military practice for the past
60 years. The islands' 33,000 acres are divided into three; an
eastern portion used for bombing practice and a western segment,
which is used mainly as an ammunition depot. The islanders live
in between these two strips.
Since 1940 when US troops occupied the island, in preparation
for Washington's entry into World War II, there has been relentless
opposition from the islanders. The Pentagon's original plan had
been to clear the island of its inhabitants, but this was prevented
due to protests. In 1975 protesters and activists forced the US
Navy to pull out of Culebra, a sister island of Vieques.
Whenever opposition to its presence on Vieques has been raised,
the US Navy has always maintained that a cessation of military
practice would pose a threat to national security. The island
is, the Navy claims, the only place where its Atlantic Fleet can
use live ammunition for combined land, sea and air exercises.
Matters came to a head in April 1999 when a security guard,
David Sanes, was killed and four other civilians were injured
by stray bombs fired during the US Navy's training exercises for
the Kosovo conflict. The incident sparked demonstrations across
Puerto Rico, calling for the ending of the US military presence.
Around 150 protesters occupied the bombing range and remained
there for over a year. In May 2000, over a 1,000 US marines arrived
on the island and forcibly evicted the protesters. On American
Independence Day last year, 50,000 Puerto Ricans joined protests
against the further use of Vieques for military purposes. The
Pentagon had also admitted for the first time to having used napalm
on the island.
Last October military forces from the US and other NATO countries
staged a mock invasion on Vieques, despite repeated calls from
campaigners for a delay to enable protesters who had broken into
the bombing range a chance to get out. Several dozen warships
and hundreds of military aircraft shelled the island before thousands
of troops went ashore in a simulation of a United Nations mission.
Then US President Bill Clinton, seeking to repair strained
relations between Washington and San Juan, ordered the phasing
out of live ammunitions but ruled that inert shells' would
continue to be fired until 2003 when a referendum organised by
the military would be held amongst Puerto Ricans. In order to
exert pressure for the resumption of live-fire exercises, Clinton
held out the offer of a $40 million development package (which
originated in an un-honoured 1983 pledge between the US and Puerto
Rican governments) to salvage the island's faltering economy.
The bombing has largely destroyed the fishing industry upon which
most islanders relied. The granting of clemency to 11 Puerto Rican
nationalist prisoners, serving long jail terms, in September 1999
was also largely motivated by the US administration's efforts
to diffuse opposition to its military operations in the Caribbean.
With the closure of its Panama headquarters, the US military's
Southern Command transferred many of its functions to Puerto Rico.
The court case being brought by the inhabitants of Vieques
will be closely watched by the various NATO countries that sent
troops to Iraq in 1991 and Kosovo in 1999, due to public controversy
over the possible link between the use of DU shells in those conflicts
and a high number of sometimes fatal leukaemia cases amongst soldiers.
Campaigners across Vieques pursued an injunction through the
Freedom of Information Act, which forced the US Navy to publicly
admit to having fired DU shells on the island in 1999. The Navy
maintained that this had been done by mistake' as the wrong
ammunition had somehow been loaded onto fighter jets. It reported
that efforts had been made to recover the radioactive shell casings,
but only around 50 had been located.
The Navy insisted that several hundred DU shells would not
be enough to constitute a health hazard. Scientists, however,
say they have found signs of a far greater use of DU ammunitions.
After conducting tests on soil samples from the Vieques bombing
range, the scientists claim they have found evidence of systematic
shelling with DU rounds that goes back at least a decade.
Jorge Fernandez, an environmental expert from Puerto Rico,
flatly contradicted the Navy's claims: They say the shells
were used on target tanks on one particular spot, but when we
made soil samples we found nine separate spots, all over the hundreds
of acres of this bombing range, which showed significant levels
of uranium.
Campaigners have also identified target tanks on the bombing
range dating back to 1991, which are pierced with holes characteristic
of DU shellswith their ability to burn smoothly through
armour plating rather than blast it apart like conventional ordnance.
John Arthur Eaves, from a Mississippi based law firm that specialises
in cases involving industrial pollution, has brought together
3,600 islanders who claim their illnesses are linked to the bombing
of Vieques with DU shells. I think $100m may turn out to
be at the lower end of the scale of what we might get from the
Navy, said Eaves. We have already spent $7m on preparing
this case which we wouldn't have done if we didn't think we had
a very good chance of winning.
One of the cases, which is sadly all too typical, is that of
Rolando Garcia. Garcia is a father of two young children. He is
only 32 years of age, but looks much older. All his body hair
has fallen out and he walks with the slow shuffling movements
of an old and infirm man. It is a tremendous effort just to cross
his living room floor.
Garcia used to work on the bombing range, maintaining military
buildings and believes this is when he was exposed to DU. His
test results confirm that he is contaminated by a long list of
toxic materials including titanium, but the most worrying is uranium.
I had never heard of uranium before this, he said
but now it looks like it might kill me.
Some families have more than one member affected. Ava Torres,
who contracted cancer of the uterus in 1994, later watched her
father die of a stroke. Both cases are believed to be linked to
the bombings.
Many islanders who have never been on the bombing range itself
are nonetheless showing high levels of uranium in medical tests.
It is believed that they have picked up metals blown off the bombing
range by the strong easterly winds that regularly blow across
the island. On BBC Radio's The 5 Live Report, broadcast
on February 4, Matthew Chapman visited and interviewed protesters
outside the US Navy base on Vieques. While conducting the report,
the protesters and Chapman came under attack from US troops. Soldiers
emerged from around the razor wired wall of the base and sprayed
the protesters with pepper-gas.
Chapman went on to interview US Navy Commander John Carerra,
who said, Stories of cancers and illness are just part of
a campaign of misinformation by those opposed to our presence
on the island.
Chapman then asked Carerra why protestors had been sprayed
with pepper-gas. Carerra replied that the US Navy had never done
such a thing. When Chapman informed Carerra that he had just come
from a protest where pepper gas had been used, a press officer
interjected to assert that the troops used the gas because the
protesters were repeatedly harassing them.
The US Navy has recently added the slogan Doing everything
to be a good neighbour to its website and has donated six
pianos to the island. When the Vieques bombing range closed last
year due to protests, the British Royal Navy invited its US counterparts
to practice on an undisclosed island off the Scottish mainland.
See Also:
Depleted uranium responsible
for cancer among Europe's Balkan troops
[9 January 2001]
Mounting evidence points
to poisonous legacy of NATO's depleted uranium munitions
[26 January 2001]
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