Cancer: NATO’s time bomb in the Balkans

24 March, 2009, 22:23

Tuesday marks the 10th anniversary of the beginning of the three-month NATO 
bombing campaign of the former Yugoslavia - and a decade later, the wounds of 
the war are still felt.

Throughout the areas which have been affected by  
<http://www.russiatoday.com/Politics/2009-03-24/The_day_when_Russia_made_a_U-turn_on_its_way_to_West.html>
 NATO bombings, hundreds of people are dying of cancer. Experts say that this 
may be a result of uranium shells being used.

A little cemetery in Bratunac, Eastern Bosnia became the final resting place 
for a number of cancer victims. A local resident, who preferred to remain 
anonymous, gave RT the names of some who are buried there. He says they all 
died of cancer.

 
<http://www.russiatoday.ru/Top_News/2009-03-24/Cancer__NATO_s_time_bomb_in_the_Balkans.html/?fullstory>
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Djoko Zelenovic, who worked in the local military repair factory, died from the 
disease at the age of 65. The 35 year-old mother of two small children also 
rests here.

There used to be no more than one or two funerals a year in this small Serbian 
village in Eastern Bosnia. Since NATO dropped bombs on Sarajevo in the summer 
of 1995, the number has climbed to as many as one or two deaths a month.

Nikola Zelenovic’s parents are buried here. He says they were healthy until the 
NATO bombings and is now spearheading an investigation.

Nikola says that "my family lived throughout the war years in the town of 
Hadjici. My father was working in one of the factories there when NATO bombed 
it. His health problems started soon afterwards. He died from lung cancer. My 
mother died a year and a half after him from Leukemia. My parents were never 
sick before." 

Starting on March 24th, 1999, for three months NATO bombed Serb targets in the 
Former Republic of Yugoslavia. Four years earlier its forces had bombed 
Bosnia-Herzegovina.

Their aim was to end the fighting between Serbs and Albanians who lived in the 
areas.

But they left a time bomb behind them. In the years that followed, hundreds of 
people living in the areas that were hit have died of cancer

In Kosovo, the number of cancer patients has grown three times over the last 
ten years, while in Bosnia-Herzegovina, already more than a thousand people 
have died from cancer.

Doctor Slavko Zdrale has treated several cancer patients over the past years 
and boldly advances theories on the subject: 

He told RT that “a few years ago we started noticing that there was as many as 
five times the number of people dying of different kinds of cancer as compared 
to the number of people who had been sick before the war.”

“We worked out that 90% of them came from areas NATO had bombed and from areas 
where ammunition with uranium was used. Nobody in the international community 
took much notice until Italian soldiers who were stationed in those areas 
started dying from cancer-related illnesses.” 

In Pale, Bosnia-Herzegovina, the war crimes court is recording evidence of an 
increased number of cancer patients. The court says that the pieces of 
ammunition found in the bombed areas had a much higher level of radiation than 
is internationally allowed. Investigators are convinced that this radiation is 
the underlying cause of cancer.

Simo Tusevljak, the coordinator of the Research and documentation of war 
crimes, stated that “we believe that this was a deliberate attempt by NATO 
forces to kill as many people as possible. It was also a chance for the West to 
test new weapons.” .

“But there is nothing we can do," he added. "We cannot file any complaint 
against NATO because all those involved have diplomatic immunity. A NATO 
soldier can kill and never be prosecuted. But perhaps one day some senior 
officials from NATO who ordered the bombings will be prosecuted. I believe the 
order came from high up."

NATO hasn't commented on the claims and has dismissed Serbian and Italian 
investigations.

There has been no other independent research conducted on the subject.

The little cemetery in Bratunac is already full. But locals fear the number of 
cancer victims will continue to grow for at least the next fifty years, or for 
as long as it takes for the air to clean.

Ten years after the NATO bombings, the alliance still has a lot to answer for. 
But no matter when those answers come (or whether they will come at all) they 
will be too late for the cancer victims.

http://www.russiatoday.ru/Top_News/2009-03-24/Cancer__NATO_s_time_bomb_in_the_Balkans.html

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