"Euro parliament calls for moratorium on use of depleted uranium rounds"

even though;

"The US has flatly rejected the call, repeatedly denying the existence of
any link between the use of the munitions and health risks."


here is even more heavy, metalic and long pervading
evidence that NATO is more of a burned out contaminated
shell of a relic than a deep penetrating full metal jacket.

The trans Atlantic 'Special Relationship' is fast becoming
the 'Back Stabbing' Everyday Emnity as the twin headed imperial
Gorgon re-aligns its sights and begins to devour... its self...


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Sent: Thursday, January 18, 2001 8:07 PM
Subject: Euro parliament calls for moratorium on DU rounds [STOPNATO.ORG.UK]


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Euro parliament calls for moratorium on use of depleted uranium rounds
http://asia.dailynews.yahoo.com/headlines/world/article.html?s=asia/headlines/010117/w
orld/afp/Euro_parliament_calls_for_moratorium_on_use_of_depleted_uranium_rounds.html
=============== + ================
Wednesday, January 17 9:10 PM SGT

Euro parliament calls for moratorium on use of depleted uranium rounds

STRASBOURG, Jan 17 (AFP) -
The European Parliament on Wednesday called for a moratorium on the use
of depleted uranium munitions suspected of causing a basket of illnesses
including cancer among NATO troops dubbed "Balkans syndrome."
In a resolution, the euro-deputies called "on EU member states that are
also NATO members to propose that a moratorium be placed on the use of
depleted uranium (DU) weapons in accordance with" precautionary
principles.
They also called for an assessment of the direct and indirect effects of
the use of DU rounds on the environment and civilian populations in the
region.
The resolution acknowledged NATO'S position that "there is now neither
medical nor statistical proof clearly establishing the existence of a
link between the use of depleted uranium and the appearance of leukemia
and other forms of cancer or other sicknesses among soldiers and
policemen" having served as NATO peacekeepers in the Balkans.
But it said the "setting up of an independent European medical work
group" to study the medical complaints was desirable.
Earlier Wednesday, EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana told deputies
he saw "no link" between use of depleted uranium munitions in the
Balkans and cancers contracted by soldiers who served there.
"We need precise facts," Solana said during a parliamentary debate on
the use of the high-penetrating DU rounds and claims they had caused
leukemia and other forms of cancer in peacekeeping troops.
"We are going to act in transparency," he said. "We need to base our
conclusions on facts, not on suppositions."
NATO on Tuesday announced it was embarking on a broad study to determine
the causes of so-called "Balkans syndrome," although it firmly contends
that no scientifically proven link existed between DU rounds and cancer.
Solana was secretary general of NATO during the air campaign against
Belgrade in 1999, in which the United States said it fired 31,000
depleted uranium projectiles.
He called for "transparency between EU member states, the EU and NATO,
between the allies and their non-NATO partners in Balkans peacekeeping
operations, and among governments in the region."
"I cannot inform you of things of which I am not cognizant," he added.
"That is a subject which, by its very nature, is the responsibility of
the governments."
Solana said, though, that he was anxious to reassure the Euro-deputies
that they would "know everything that we know" through the intermediary
of the European Union Council.
During the debate preceding passage of the moratorium resolution, the
president of the Greens group, Paul Lannoye, said he had written to
Solana in May 1999 about the use of the material but had never received
an answer.
"The need for truth about the past and openness about the future is
incontestable," said Francis Wurtz from the United European Left group.
Both the Greens and the United European Left have joined Italy, Belgium,
Portugal, Norway and Finland in calling for a moratorium on the use of
depleted uranium munitions.


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