-Caveat Lector-

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Serbian town will be polluted for years following NATO strikes

MISHA SAVIC



PANCEVO, Yugoslavia (AP) - The grass is bleached to a scary pale grey and
little Ana has trouble breathing when she plays in the park, weeks after NATO
caused environmental havoc by bombing key industrial sites.

Pancevo, an industrial town eight kilometres northeast of Belgrade, was the
town worst hit during the air raids, and doctors and environmental experts
say the after-effects of the bombing will be felt for years - and maybe
generations - to come.

Huge amounts of chemicals and poisonous fumes have polluted the air, the
ground and the water in and around Pancevo.

The damage dates back to April when NATO missiles struck Pancevo's three
major industrial sites - an oil refinery, a nitrogen fertilizer factory and a
chemical plant, releasing hundreds of tonnes of toxic materials that spread
over the entire region.

Weeks after the bombing ended, a visit to the fertilizer factory still
produced a stinging sensation in the nose and throat. A sticky, yellowish
fluid, apparently a leaked chemical, stank and slowly solidified under the
blazing summer sun near the front gate.

"I am afraid to even think what we breathed in, what chemicals got into our
bodies," said Tamara Radjenovic, a 32-year-old teacher, as she watched her
five-year old daughter Ana play in a park. Every few minutes, the girl came
to her mother to rest, gasping for air.

"She gets tired so easily, she has dark circles around her eyes. It wasn't
like that before the bombs. She is not the child she used to be," Radjenovic
said of her daughter with a deep, sorrowful sigh.

Local doctors who examined the girl said the symptoms were caused by the
chemicals and that there was nothing they could do now.

Pancevo's municipal authorities have compiled a day-by-day list of dangerous
leaks, fires and explosions since March 24 when the air raids began. The town
of 70,000 was hit from the beginning.

At least 25,000 tonnes of fuel, mostly from the bombed refinery, burned into
the atmosphere, blanketing a wide area with a layer of tar.

More than 1,400 tonnes of poisonous vinyl chloride burned and spread noxious
fumes when NATO bombs hit a storage tank at Pancevo's Petrohemija factory.
The substance, normally used to produce plastics, is carcinogenic, and two
per cent of it turns into even more dangerous phosgene when burned.

A hundred tonnes of mercury, almost as much sodium hydroxide and tonnes of
other chemicals, including nitric acid, burned up or leaked into the Danube
River.

Those substances almost invariably cause respiratory problems, nausea,
diarrhea, dizziness, skin rashes and blisters when inhaled in even the
smallest quantities.

In one of the worst nights of bombing, instruments measuring pollution in
Pancevo showed a vinyl chloride concentration of 0.43 milligrams per cubic
metre, or 8,600 times more than recommended maximum levels.

Doctors in Pancevo said there were about a hundred cases of acute
intoxication, mostly among nightshift workers, security and firemen who were
at the sites during the nighttime raids. Three of them have died.

Health authorities are preparing a comprehensive report expected to be
released later this year. While doctors have been instructed to withhold
details, they do acknowledge a sharp increase in patients suffering from
pollution-related symptoms.

"I had a patient who was treated for infertility last year," said a local
gynecologist, insisting on anonymity.

"She wanted a baby so much, she was two months pregnant when the bombing
began. She got so terrified of possible birth defects that she had an
abortion last month."

The woman made her decision after a surge of miscarriages in the town in late
April, he said.

Milan Borna, head of the environmental protection department in Pancevo,
said, "The full extent of the damage will show in coming years. We fear that
the worst effects may be degenerative changes in future generations."

Meanwhile, a 17-member expert team, assembled by the UN Environment Program,
arrived in Yugoslavia this week and immediately headed to Pancevo to take
samples of water and soil for analysis in two mobile laboratories.

A preliminary report is due later this month and a broader one in September.
UN Secretary General Kofi Annan will then decide on possible follow-up
measures.

A mission member, speaking on condition of anonymity, said a chief motive for
the UN visit was the health of the Danube River which flows through
Yugoslavia and into neighbouring Romania and Bulgaria, carrying a share of
the toxic chemicals downstream.

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