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Sydney
Morning Herald
AAP
June 23, 2003
Troops
Report Uranium Sickness Symptoms
During operation Desert Storm in 1991 {nuclear expert}, Dr
Rokke, led
a team assigned to clean up uranium contamination caused by friendly fire.
"What we saw can be described in only three
words - Oh my God! The wounds were horrible,
the contamination was extensive," he said.
Australian servicemen and women who served in the recent Iraq
war were reporting symptoms of uranium sickness,
a United States nuclear weapons expert said today.
Dr Douglas Rokke is a former US Army nuclear health physicist and was formerly
the Pentagon's expert on the health effects of depleted uranium ammunition.
Speaking in Melbourne today, Dr Rokke said Iraqi women and children and American
and Iraqi military personnel had reported respiratory illnesses and rashes after
the recent conflict, and he had also been told of Australian servicemen and
women with similar symptoms.
"That's
the reports I received from the US Army medical department. That's something
that needs to be verified and looked into," he said.
"When American soldiers are sick and the Iraqis are sick there's nothing
that says an Australian soldier is going to be isolated when he goes through
those areas and he is not going to become ill. During operation Desert Storm
in 1991 Dr Rokke led a team assigned to clean up uranium contamination caused
by friendly fire.
"What we saw can be described in only three words - Oh my God! The wounds
were horrible, the contamination was extensive," he said. "Although
myself and my team members wore respiratory and skin protection, that protection
we know today does not provide any adequate protection against the inhalation,
the ingestion, the absorption of uranium compounds."
He said he now suffered rashes, respiratory problems, kidney problems and cataracts
related to his exposure to uranium.
Dr Rokke is in Australia to speak against the use of depleted uranium weapons,
which he describes as a crime against humanity, creating a toxicological nightmare.
He is campaigning for the outlawing of depleted uranium munitions, medical care
for those who have been exposed to uranium and a clean-up of exposed environments.
He will speak at public meetings and meet government officials and returned
service groups while in Australia.
"What I have learned from my work is that uranium munitions must be banned,"
Dr Rokke said.
"When we can no longer clean up the environment and we can no longer provide
medical care for anybody that's exposed, then that weapon must never be used
in conflict."
Jacob Grech, of the OzPeace Network, said while Australia did not use depleted
uranium munitions, the country exported between 2500 and 3000 tonnes of uranium
to the United States each year for energy. "It's the waste energy products
that is used in the manufacture of these munitions.
"From the very start, before they are even made, Australia and the Australian
government is complicit in the production of these weapons."
"We'd like our government as a bare minimum to put Australian service veterans
from the first and second Gulf wars, as well as Afghanistan, through rigorous
testing to get a baseline study of exactly what the health effects are of depleted
uranium and other chemical toxins ... and treat them," Mr Grech said. "So
far our government has been furphying, it's been releasing reports which parrot
the Pentagon line six to 12 months later, it's been in a state of denial."
Mr Grech said he had not yet had reports of service personnel from the most
recent conflict suffering uranium sickness, but there were a lot of veterans
from the first Gulf war displaying symptoms.
"I think what we are going to see with Australian returned service people
from the Gulf and Afghanistan is 20 years down the track exactly what happened
with agent orange in Vietnam," Mr Grech said.
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