'People against Sanctions' on Iraq will be holding a photograghic
display on 
the efffects of the use DU on the children in Iraq since the 1991 Gulf
War.

Photographs were taken by Professor Siegwart-Horst Gunther, MD, DSc, PhD 
Captions: English, French, German and Arabic

Sunday 5th December, 9am - 12:30am

Place: Near the Public Lecture Theatre, Melbourne University.
during the 2nd plenary session of the 13th World conference of
International Physicians for
the Prevention of Nuclear war.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
The 1991 Gulf War was recently termed as a nuclear one by Helen
Caldicott-
and cause of Gulf War sickness.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

An International DU conference in Iraq is currently being held in
Baghdad.

Off the wire from Reuters (Dominic Evans) 

BAGHDAD, Dec 2 - Iraq accused Western powers on Wednesday of inflicting
a
creeping health and environmental disaster in its southern provinces by
firing radioactive munitions in the 1991 Gulf War.

Opening a conference to highlight the effects of depleted uranium
ammunition used by the United States and Britain, officials said cancer
cases had soared in parts of south Iraq and radiation levels were
unusually high.

"Irreparable damage has hit the Iraqi people and environment which gives
Iraq the legitimate right to compensation," Ministry of Health Under
Secretary Shawki Murcus said.

Murcus listed a catalogue of ailments including congenital defects,
muscle
disorders, fatigue and cancer cases, and said the two-day meeting would
show they were caused by the depleted uranium used in the 1991 fighting.

"We have established a link between depleted uranium and these cases,"
Murcus said.

The conference brought together Iraqi researchers, foreign scientists
and
doctors. American and British war veterans also returned to the country
they fought seven years ago, seeking answers to what they said were
their
own unexplained ailments.

Iraqi officials say allied forces estimated they had used 300 tonnes of
depleted uranium munitions against Iraqi forces, but that other
researchers put the figure at 700 to 800 tonnes. 

Sami al-Araji, who serves on a government committee studying the
aftermath
of the 1991 war, said air, soil and water samples taken near Iraq's
border
with Kuwait showed abnormally high levels of radiation. 

Jawad al-Ali, a cancer doctor in Iraq's southern city of Basra, told
Reuters his hospital had registered 400 new cases this year, including a
high proportion of lymphomas and leukemias he linked to radiation,
compared to 116 in 1988. Cancer deaths jumped to 303 last year from 34
in
1988, he said.

With its health services devastated by eight years of sanctions imposed
for its 1990 invasion of Kuwait, Iraq says it cannot afford expensive
cancer drugs to treat the afflicted let alone the huge cost of
decontaminating affected areas -- already some of the poorest and
worst-hit by the sanctions.

It has tried for years to pin the blame for the health crisis in the
south
on the use of depleted uranium (DU), a dense metal used to make
armour-piercing projectiles.

DU emits less radiation than naturally occurring uranium but retains
radioactive properties. 

Britain has said DU rounds can produce small amounts of radioactive and
toxic particles on impact, but it is unlikely that anyone outside the
target area would be affected. 

But Ray Bristow, who served in the Gulf War as a British medical
operations technician well behind battle lines, said he was tested
positive for depleted uranium last month.

"I didn't think for one minute I'd be affected because I wasn't in the
battlefield," Bristow told reporters. "I was exposed to DU at levels 100
times normal levels. It makes me wonder what happened to those on the
front line." 

Colin Purcell-Lee, who served in the same medical unit as Bristow, said
Britain was trying to suppress information about depleted uranium
because
of fears it would be held liable for illnesses suffered by soldiers on
both sides. 

"It is a grotesque irony that we had to come here to get information
that
our own government is not prepared to give us," he said. 

Murcus said symptoms reported by some American and British veterans --
which include memory loss, muscle pain, leukemia, kidney and thyroid
problems -- were similar to those afflicting Iraqi soldiers. 

The Western participants to the conference said they hoped that by
comparing notes, they could shed light on their cases.

"I came here today to hear what you found in your research, to
compare...and hopefully we can get some answers," said Carol Picou, a
42-year-old former U.S. military nurse.

--------------------------

'MoD raid' on Gulf veterans

Two Gulf War Veterans' homes were raided yesterday by Ministry of
Defence
police searching for leaked documents alleged to have shown they had
tested the soldiers for depleted uranium, it was claimed. 

The National Gulf War Veterans and Families Association said Ray
Bristow's
home in Hull and Andy Honer's home in Essex were raided in an attempt to
confiscate documents apparently showing the MoD is investigating
depleted
uranium in British Gulf War veter ans. 

Mr Bristow, 40, is currently in Baghdad attending a conference on
depleted
uranium with two American specialists on radiation. He is trying to find
out why he and his colleages are ill.  To date, 258 Gulf War veterans
have
died since the war and 3,000 are ill. 

Guardian 2nd December 1998
---------------------------
LL.VL

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