By
Barbara Rose Johnston
June
1, 2012
Are
you wondering about the disconcerting contradictions in the nuclear news in
recent weeks?
Following the release of a May 2012 report, newspapers around the world posted headlines announcing that the World Health Organization concludes that Fukushima radiation emissions pose minimal health risk.
Based
on an assessment of reported emissions of radioiodine and cesium up through
September 2011, Japan’s nuclear meltdown poses no serious cancer risk, except
for localized exposures around Fukushima prefecture, which may result in
increased risk of thyroid cancer.
In
the same week, Japanese press reported the alarming news that TEPCO’s
assessments of total radioiodine releases were some 1.6 times greater than the Japanese Government’s assessment while, on the
same day, the Japanese government issued a reassuring statement that
“while gross releases of iodine-131 and cesium-137 are actually far greater than originally estimated, the public can rest assured, as releases to the sea have not resulted in contamination beyond the plant’s immediate area because the mixing power of ocean currents has dispersed the substances beyond the limits of detection in seawater samples”
Meanwhile,
the US press reported findings from a study published in The Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences demonstrating that by August 2011, cesium-134 and
cesium-137 from Fukushima was present in the tissue of Pacific blue fin tuna, as evidenced
samples taken off the coast of San Diego, in Southern California.
In
the media storm that followed this report, government experts with the US Food
and Drug Administration proclaimed no need for public panic, as radiation
levels were detectable but simply too low to be hazardous and independent
scientists explained why the presence, even at small levels, was so alarming
and noted the need for additional monitoring.
As
has been the norm in this most recent nuclear disaster, contradictory
information abounds, with alarming news countered or contradicted by
reassurances that muddy the water, yet achieve the goal of containing and
controlling an impotent public.
We
have been here before, in a world blanketed with nuclear fallout, where massive
amounts of iodine, cesium, strontium and other radioactive isotopes moved
through the marine and terrestrial food chain and the human body, in
well-documented ways, with degenerative and at times deadly outcomes.
Yet, for many reasons, while the environmental and biomedical trajectory of such exposures are well documented, the human experience and associated public health risks are largely suppressed, classified, or simply and persistently denied.
Sometimes
clarity is best achieved by stepping back, taking pause, and considering the
historical antecedents and experiences that have brought us to these chaotic
times. A new documentary film by Adam Horowitz offers an opportunity to
do just that.
Premiering
June 2, at 6:30 pm at the Lincoln Center in New York City, Nuclear Savage: The Islands of Secret Project 4.1 is
a poignant, provocative, and deeply troubling look at lingering and lasting
effects of nuclear disaster and the human consequences of US government efforts
to define, contain, and control public awareness and concern.
Nuclear Savage recounts the experiences of the Marshallese nation
in the years following World War II, as they played host to the US’s Pacific
Proving Grounds and served as human subjects in the classified, abusive
pseudoscience that characterized the US government medical response to civilian
exposures from the 1954 Bravo Test, the largest and dirtiest hydrogen bomb
detonated by the United States. Detonated in the populated nation of the
Marshall Islands.
Here
is the story: Following World War II, the Marshall Islands became part of the
Trusteeship of the Pacific, and in 1946 after the detonation of two atomic
bombs in the Bikini lagoon, the United States was given the authority to
administer the islands as a Strategic Trusteeship. The terms of this agreement
included the US obligation to “Protect the inhabitants against the loss of
their lands and resources” and “Protect the health of the inhabitants of the
Trust Territory.”
Between
1946 and 1958 the United States tested 66 nuclear weapons on or near Bikini and
Enewetok atolls, atomizing entire islands and, according to records
declassified in 1994, blanketing the entire Marshallese nation with measurable
levels of radioactive fallout from 20 of these tests.
.
.
To consider the gravity of this history: the total explosive yield of nuclear militarism in the Marshall Islands was 93 times that of all US atmospheric tests in Nevada, and more than 7,000 Hiroshima bombs.
Hydrogen
bomb tests were especially destructive, generating intense fallout containing
an array of isotopes, including radioactive iodine, which concentrates in the
thyroid and can cause both cancer and other medical conditions.All
told, by US estimates, some 6.3 BILLION curies of radioactive Iodine-131
were released to the atmosphere as a result of the nuclear testing in the Marshall Islands:
42 times greater than the 150 million curies released as a result of the
testing in Nevada, 150 times greater than the 40 million curies released as a
result of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster.
.
.
And,
while comparison to the ongoing Fukushima meltdown is difficult as emissions
continue, estimates to date have ranged from 2.4 to 24 million curies. Simply
put, radioactive contamination in the Marshall Islands was, and is, immense.
.
.
Radioactive
fallout from the 1954 Bravo Test not only blanketed a populated nation, but
also severely harmed the 23 Japanese crew members of Daigo Fukuryu Maru (No. 5
Lucky Dragon) who were in Marshallese waters harvesting a school of tuna when
fallout blanketed their vessel.
.
.
The
US provided antibiotics to treating doctors at the Atomic Bomb Casualty
Commission in Japan. One of the crew members, Kuboyama Aikichi, died a few
weeks later. In the Marshall Islands, residents of Rongelap and Rongerik Atolls
who were evacuated in earlier weapons test but not informed nor moved before
this largest of all detonations, experienced near fatal exposures.
.
.
News
of the disastrous exposure of Japanese fishermen and Marshallese island
residents fueled international outrage, prompting demands in the United Nations
for a nuclear weapons test ban, a series of pacifying news releases from the US
about the rapid return to health of exposed civilians.
What was not reported to an interested world public, is the news that the heavily exposed people of Rongelap, once evacuated, were immediately enrolled as human subjects in a top-secret study, Project 4.1, which documented the array of health outcomes from their acute exposures, but did not treat the pain or discomfort of radiation burns, nor utilize antibiotics to offset any potential infection.
Nor
did the US make public the full array of findings from their extensive
documentation of the character and extent of radioactive fallout during the
1954 and other nuclear weapons tests, which demonstrated the deposition,
movement, and accumulation of radioisotopes in the marine and terrestrial
environment of Rongelap and other northern atolls.
.
.
In
1957, the people of Rongelap were returned to their homelands with great
fanfare, moving into newly built homes on islands still dangerously
contaminated from prior nuclear weapons tests and clearly vulnerable to the
fallout from the 33 bombs detonated in 1958.
This repatriation of the Rongelap community was both planned and celebrated by scientists and officials at the US Department of Defense and the Atomic Energy Commission, who saw a significant opportunity to place a human population in a controlled setting to document how radiation moves through the food chain and human body.
Annually,
and then as the years progressed and degenerative health symptoms increased,
biannually, the US medical teams visited by ship to examine, with x-ray,
photos, blood, urine and tissue samples, the relative health of the community.
.
.
It
is this story of human subject experimentation with unwitting subjects that forms
the core of the Nuclear Savage
film, illustrating both the abusive disregard and human consequences of
experiments that violate US law, the Nuremburg Code, and Article 7 of the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights which states that “no one
shall be subject without his free consent to medical or scientific
experimentation.”
.
.
Research
conducted for the Marshall
Islands Nuclear Claims Tribunal and recently submitted
to a UN Special Rapporteur on toxics and
human rights adds more detail to narrative played out in Horowitz’s Nuclear Savage film.
.
.
The
long term study of the human health effects of exposure to fallout and
remaining nuclear waste in the Marshallese environment extended over four
decades with a total of 72 research excursions to the Marshall Islands
involving Marshallese citizens from Rongelap, Utrik, Likiep, Enewetak and Majuro
Atolls.
.
.
Some
539 men, women, and children were subject to studies documenting and monitoring
the varied late effects of radiation. In addition to the purposeful exposure of
humans to the toxic and radioactive waste from nuclear weapons, some Marshallese
received radioisotope injections, underwent experimental surgery, and were
subject to other procedures in experiments addressing scientific questions
which, at times, had little or no relevance to medical treatment needs and in
some instances involved procedures that were detrimental to their health.
.
.
The
United States Department of Energy acknowledged in 1994 administration of Cr-51
and tritiated water, and in at least three instances, Cr-51 was injected in
three young women of child-bearing age.
.
.
A
2004 review of declassified research proposals, exam reports, and published
articles in support of a Marshall Islands Nuclear Claims Tribunal proceeding
found that a broader array of radioisotopes were used ~ radioactive iodine,
iron, zinc, carbon-14 ~ for a wide array of experiments including research
demonstrating the linkages between radiation exposure, metabolic disorders, and
the onset of type-2 diabetes.
.
.
Arguably,
while these experiences were abusive, a broader public health interest was
being served, as the results of such science could potentially influence
government policy and actions to protect humanity from the adverse health
outcomes of nuclear fallout. And indeed, significant scientific knowledge was
accumulated.
However, the bulk of these findings demonstrated varied degenerative health effects resulting from chronic exposure to low-level radiation in the environment, findings which threatened political (nuclear proliferation) and economic (nuclear energy) agendas.
Such findings were buried in the classified files.
For
example, the presence and bioaccumulation of radioiron (Fe-55) in fallout from
the 1958 detonations of nuclear bombs was documented in terrestrial and marine
environments, including lagoon sediments, coral reefs, and reef fish, with alarming
levels in goat fish liver, but this knowledge was not shared with the larger scientific world until 1972,
nor shared with Marshallese until the declassification process supporting an
Advisory Commission on Human Radiation investigation forced bilateral
disclosure to the Marshall Islands Government in the 1990s.
.
.
The
movement of cesium through the soils, and bioaccumulation in coconut crabs,
trees, and fruit ~ primary sources of food and liquid in the Marshallese diet ~
was also documented, with restrictions on the consumption of coconut crab
periodically issued, without explanation.
.
.
The
movement through the food chain, bioaccumulation, and biological behavior of
radioiodine in the human body was documented, and when thyroid nodules,
cancers, and disease resulted, these conditions were studied and treated
through various experimental means, though the relationship between nuclear
weapons testing, fallout, contamination of the environment, and human
subsistence in that environment was not explained until decades had passed.
.
.
In
short, a wide array of other degenerative health outcomes were documented,
including changes in red blood cell production and subsequent anemia, metabolic
and related disorders; immune system vulnerabilities; muscoskeletal
degeneration; cataracts; cancers and leukemia; miscarriages, congenital
defects, and infertility…
However, when Marshallese residents suggested to US scientists that these and other unusual health problems were linked to the environmental contamination from nuclear fallout, their concerns were repeatedly and, because of the classified nature of the science, easily dismissed then..And, because time and the US power over the radiation health effects narrative is so immense and entrenched, they continue to be dismissed now.
The
experiences of the Marshallese are particularly relevant to a world still
coming to terms with the ulcerating disaster that is Fukushima, a point that is
not lost to the members of United Nations Human Rights Council, which has been
engaged in an effort over the past number of years to explore the varied means
by which humans are unable to enjoy their right to a healthy environment,
including the human rights abuses associated with movement and dumping of toxic
and dangerous products and wastes.
.
.
Mr.
Calin Georgescu (Romania), the UN Special Rapporteur for toxics and human
rights, has a mandate that includes, among other directives, a country-specific
mission to investigate these concerns in the Marshall Islands, especially the
human rights consequences of environmental contamination pertains from nuclear
weapons testing and other US military activities.
.
.
In
March 2012, Mr. Georgescu visited the RMI, interviewing displaced members of
the Bikini, Enewetak, and Rongelap Atolls and other Marshallese citizens whose
health and other rights have been severely impacted by living in a contaminated environment.
.
.
In
April he traveled to Washington DC where he interviewed US government
officials, met with independent experts such as myself, and discussed his
investigation with the Marshall Islands Ambassador and the RMI UN
representative. The Special Rapporteur is now preparing a report that will be
presented to the United Nations Human Rights Council meeting in Geneva during
their September 2012 meeting.
.
.
Why
should a world community care about Cold War nuclear militarism in the Marshall
Islands and its varied ulcerating consequences, especially given the many
urgent and all too current crises we now face?
.
.
The
US knowingly and willfully exposed a vulnerable population to toxic radioactive
waste as a means to document the movement and degenerative health outcomes of
radiation as it moves through the food chain and human body.
.
.
This
human subject experiment extended over the decades with profound consequences
for individual subjects and the Marshallese nation as a whole. The Marshallese
have become a nation whose experience as nuclear nomads, medical subjects,
citizen advocates and innovators is shared by many citizens, communities and
indigenous peoples around the world.
.
.
Their
experiences, consequential damages, and their struggles to restore
cultural ways of life, quality of life, inter-generational health, and long
term sustainability, are especially salient to a nation and to a world
concerned with the lingering, persistent, and invasive dangers of a nuclear
world.
.
.
With
both the US and RMI participating in the UN Special Rapporteur’s investigation,
there is an obligation for both governments to receive and respond to the
report recommendations in a timely fashion, and in subsequent reviews, to
demonstrate truly meaningful remediation and reparation for their nuclear
legacies in the Marshall Islands.
.
.
Furthermore,
given the timing of the Human Rights Council review ~ when the US Presidential
election cycle is in full swing ~ international scrutiny of Marshallese nuclear
legacy issues may provide further fuel for the fires now raging over such
questions as the effects of chronic exposure to low-level radiation, radiation
monitoring, permissibility levels, who pays for the long term public health
costs of nuclear energy, and the absurd notion that a tactical strategic
nuclear military is a sustainable and viable option.
.
.
And,
finally, given the historical role of the United Nations in designating the
Marshall Islands as a strategic trust, there is a moral and legal obligation
for the United Nations community to assist in the remediation, restoration and
reparation due to the environment, health, and dignity of the Marshallese
nation.
.
.
International
attention to this history and experience is long overdue, and sadly and sorely
relevant to a post-Fukushima world.
.
.
BARBARA ROSE JOHNSTON is an anthropologist and senior research fellow at
the Center for Political Ecology. She is the co-author of The Consequential
Dangers of Nuclear War: the Rongelap Report. Her most recent book, Water,
Cultural Diversity and Global Environmental Change: Emerging Trends,
Sustainable Futures? was
co published by UNESCO/Springer in 2012. She is currently assisting
the Special Rapporteur’s efforts to document the human rights consequences of
nuclear militarism in the Marshall Islands, and supporting advocacy efforts to
bring Marshallese citizens to Geneva so their own voices can be heard. Contact
her at: bjohnston@igc.org
All things to do with nuclear weapons and nuclear power stations are bad.
ReplyDelete- Aangirfan