Google – AFP, Giff Johnson (AFP), 1 March 2014
![]() |
File photo
of Rongelap Island, which was engulfed by a snowstorm of
radioactive fallout on
March 1, 1954 following a test by the United States of
a 15-megaton hydrogen
bomb (AFP/File)
|
Majuro
(Marshall Islands) — The Marshall Islands marks 60 years since the devastating
US hydrogen bomb test at Bikini Atoll Saturday, with angry exiled residents
saying they are too fearful ever to go home.
Part of the
intense Cold War nuclear arms race, the 15-megaton Bravo test on March 1, 1954
was a thousand times more powerful than the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima.
It
vaporised one island and exposed thousands in the surrounding area to
radioactive fallout.
![]() |
A July 1946
photo of a US atomic test on
Bikini Atoll in the Pacific Ocean (AFP/File)
|
"I
won't move there," Evelyn Ralpho-Jeadrik, 33, said of her home atoll,
Rongelap, which was engulfed in a snowstorm of fallout from Bravo and evacuated
two days after the test.
"I do
not believe it's safe and I don't want to put my children at risk."
People
returned to live on Rongelap in 1957 but fled again in 1985 amid fears -- later
proved correct -- about residual radiation.
Rongelap,
one of more than 60 in a necklace of coral islands, has been cleaned up as part
of a US-funded $45 million programme, but Ralpho-Jeadrik has no intention of
going back.
"I
will be forever fearful. The US told my mother it was safe and they returned to
Rongelap only to be contaminated again," she said.
It is not
just their homes which have been lost, says Lani Kramer, 42, a councilwoman in
Bikini's local government, but an entire swathe of the islands' culture.
"As a
result of being displaced, we've lost our cultural heritage -- our traditional
customs and skills, which for thousands of years were passed down from
generation to generation," she said.
Bikini
islanders have lived in exile since they were moved for the first weapons tests
in 1946, when Kramer's own grandparents were evacuated.
When US
government scientists declared Bikini safe for resettlement, some residents
were allowed to return in the early 1970s.
But they
were removed again in 1978 after ingesting high levels of radiation from eating
local foods grown on the former nuclear test site.
- 'The sky
turned red' -
"After
they were exposed like that I can never trust what the US tells us (about
Bikini)," said Kramer who says she wants justice for the generations forced
to leave.
"We
need to go to the US Congress. But no one, not my local government or the
national government, is engaged with the US Congress on this issue right
now."
The US has
expressed regret about islanders' exposure to high doses of radiation during
the Bravo test.
"While
international scientists did study the effects of that accident on the human
population unintentionally affected, the United States never intended for
Marshallese to be hurt by the tests," the US embassy in Majuro says on its
website.
Acting US
under secretary of state Rose Gottemoeller is participating in remembrance day
activities in Majuro.
Also
attending the week-long commemorations, which include a parade on Saturday, is
80-year-old Matashichi Oishi -- one of 23 fishermen aboard the Japanese Lucky
Dragon boat, which was 60 miles (100 kilometres) from the bomb.
"I
remember the brilliant flash in the west, the frightening sound that followed,
and the extraordinary sky which turned red as far as I could see," he
said.
All of the
crew became sick and many died from their illnesses -- their plight is
well-known in Japan, with echoes of the victims at Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
A visiting
group of Japanese students from the Fukushima nuclear disaster zone have also
been sharing their experiences.
"The
government says 'don't worry' (about radiation exposure) but recently we've
seen many cases of thyroid problems be confirmed in the Fukushima area,"
said Kai Sato, a Fukushima University student.
"People
don't know what is the correct information to believe."
US nuclear
experiments in the Marshall Islands ended in 1958 after 67 tests.
But a UN
report in 2012 said the effects were longlasting.
Special
Rapporteur Calin Georgescu, in his report to the UN Human Rights Council, said
that "near-irreversible environmental contamination" had led to the
loss of livelihoods and many people continued to experience "indefinite
displacement".
The report
called for the US to provide extra compensation to settle claims by
nuclear-affected Marshall Islanders and end a "legacy of distrust".
The Nuclear
Claims Tribunal awarded more than $2 billion in personal injury and land damage
claims arising from the nuclear tests, but stopped paying after a US-provided
$150 million compensation fund was exhausted.
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"Fast-Tracking" - Feb 8, 2014 (Kryon Channelling by Lee Carroll) - New (Reference to Fukushima / H-bomb nuclear pollution > 20 Min)



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