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Tahitian parliamentary report: France covered up nuclear test
fallout
By John Braddock
3 March 2006
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A decade after France conducted its last nuclear explosions
in its South Pacific colony of French Polynesia, the controversy
over the damage to local peoples health is continuing to
reverberate. According to a report presented to the French Polynesia
Assembly on February 9, French governments covered up for 40 years
the fact that the main populated island of Tahiti was subjected
to repeated fallout from atmospheric nuclear tests between 1966
and 1974.
Released after a six-month investigation, the 478-page report
concluded that the French state suppressed damning proof
that radioactive fallout occurred on Tahiti after each of the
41 atmospheric tests conducted at the Tuamotu atolls of Moruroa
and Fangataufa1,200 kilometers southeast of the capital
Papeete. France also conducted 140 underground nuclear explosions
at the same sites between 1975 and 1991, and from June 1995 to
May 1996.
Led by the Moruroa e Tatou (Moruroa and Us) association,
former test-site workers are demanding compensation for serious
medical conditions caused by their involvement in the program.
In order to appeal to growing anti-French sentiment among indigenous
Polynesians, pro-independence President Oscar Temaru promised
to make the issue of compensation a priority, as part of his successful
2005 election campaign.
The Assembly unanimously accepted the report, voting in the
absence of 21 members of the pro-French opposition party led by
former president Gaston Flosse. Flosse, a longtime Gaullist ally
of current French President Jacques Chirac, backed the testing
program during the 20 years he held office as Polynesian president
up to 2004. Flosse lost a legal challenge to the establishment
of the inquiry committee and his partys representatives
boycotted all its meetings.
The authorities in Paris did everything possible to frustrate
the Tahitian inquiry into the French nuclear testing. Officials
refused permission for the committee to visit the nuclear atolls,
maintaining a ban on any outside investigations of the sites that
has been rigorously enforced since 1966. The French Defence Ministry
and military are still in charge of the two atolls.
The committee was also denied access to critical French government
documents classified as defence secrets. Officials refused requests
for information and declined to participate in any discussions.
After the committee visited Tureia and Mangareva, the French Defence
Ministry sent a delegation to pressure the local municipalities
to destroy potentially compromising traces, such as old protective
buildings, remaining from the test period. As a result, the inquiry
was forced to base much of its report on research by the Observatory
of French Nuclear Weapons (CDRPC) and the non-government Commission
of Independent Research and Information on Radioactivity (CRIIRAD).
According to the report, the evidence that was uncoveredincluding
some 25 previously secret Defence Ministry documentsshowed
incontestable and precise proof of lying by the testing
authorities, who maintained the tests were clean and
that radioactive fallout did not affect the population. After
questioning government ministers, medical experts and health workers,
the committee concluded that high rates of thyroid cancer among
Polynesian women and the onset of acute myeloid leukemia could
be linked to radioactive fallout.
The report challenges the effectiveness of the meteorological
system put in place at the time by the Centre of Nuclear Experimentation,
on which much of the French data was based. There were only 14
weather stations covering a territory of 5 million square kilometresan
area equivalent to continental Europe. The report states that
this number was patently insufficient, and incapable of foretelling
the risks of fallout.
Significant environmental and public health consequences began
with the very first atmospheric test on July 2, 1966. Following
that test, according to evidence given by CRIIRAD, external exposure
to radioactive fallout in the Gambier Islands was twice the official
levels later published. Scientists said the radioactivity level
was 1,700 times greater than the maximum recorded by sensors at
the Bugey Nuclear Centre in France following the passage of the
radioactive cloud from the Chernobyl nuclear power plant explosion
in May 1986.
At a press conference held to coincide with the release of
the report, Moruroa and Us president Roland Oldham said
the French Cancer Society was reporting more than 600 cases of
cancer and 250 related deaths a year in French Polynesia from
a total population of 250,000. One recent study indicated that
25.7 out of 100,000 women contracted thyroid cancer, compared
to a ratio of 4.8 out of 100,000 women in France. The survey further
established that 7.4 percent of former Moruroa workers had physically
disabled children, with 2.4 percent having mentally impaired children.
In 2003, 84 of the 1,544 original members of Moruroa and Us
died. Leukemia, which typically manifests itself 15 to 20 years
after contact with radiation, is increasingly prevalent.
French Polynesia became the favoured nuclear testing ground
after France lost its Algerian sites following the bitter colonial
war there. The aggressive nuclear testing program was used to
boost Frances pretensions as a world power just as the US
was conducting atmospheric tests at Bikini atoll. The military
became the mainstay of the French Polynesian economy while its
troops and infrastructure assumed a major presence in the Pacific.
Over the next 30 years, France strenuously resisted the Polynesian
independence movement, in part to maintain its Pacific test sites.
In later years it also defied diplomatic protests by Australia
and New Zealand, which sought to exploit widespread popular opposition
throughout the region to strengthen their own hegemonic claims
over the South Pacific.
In 1985, French secret service agents were dispatched to New
Zealand to blow up the Greenpeace flagship the Rainbow Warrior
in Auckland harbour before it embarked on a protest trip to Moruroa.
Documents released in 2005 showed that the crime, which resulted
in the death of a crew member, was personally authorised by French
president Francois Mitterrand.
Faced with continuing international protests, France finally
halted nuclear testing on the Tuamotu atolls in 1996. While French
courts have since recognised that some military personnel became
health victims, the Paris authorities have denied the existence
of any radiation risks in order to fend off demands by local people
for compensation.
The Tahitian report concludes with the demand that 10 years
after the ending of the testing, disputes between the French
State and the Country [French Polynesia] on the consequences of
nuclear testing must be settled. On this basis it makes
a series of recommendations, many of which are simply appeals
to Paris.
The French authorities, however, are unlikely to simply accede
to Tahitian requests. French government spokesmen continue to
assert that the nuclear tests were conducted in a remote part
of the Tuamotu Archipelago and that local people were well protected.
In response to the report, the French High Commissioners
Office in Papeete claimed the French government had a permanent
concern for the civilian populations as well as those working
at the testing sites.
In an attempt to defuse the situation, a nuclear safety official
was dispatched to Tahiti for a five-day visit. French defence
minister Michele Alliot-Marie called for a dialogue
and invited Tahitis elected officials to visit the Tuamotu
atoll with her in April.
See Also:
30 years of testing
in Polynesian colony
Victims of French A-bomb tests demand compensation
[7 January 2004]
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