ID :
14792
Mon, 08/04/2008 - 10:02
Auther :
Shortlink :
https://oananews.org//node/14792
The shortlink copeid
UK admits Australia radiation exposure
(AAP) - British Defence chiefs have admitted servicemen were exposed to dangerous radiation levels during nuclear tests in Australia and the South Pacific in the 1950s.
The dramatic admission, made after years of denials, features in papers filed with the High Court in London by Ministry of Defence lawyers.
The Sunday Mirror newspaper said the court papers reveal that the Ministry of
Defence now believes that nuclear tests were responsible for the deaths of some
British servicemen.
However, the MoD insists that only 159 men were affected out of the 20,000 who were
present.
About 800 former servicemen from Britain, New Zealand and Fiji earlier this year
launched a multi-million dollar lawsuit against the MoD, claiming they had been
exposed to dangerous levels of radiation during tests at sites including Maralinga
in South Australia and Christmas Island.
While the case is not due to start until January, court documents seen by the
newspaper show that two British Royal Air Force servicemen Eric Denson and John
Brothers were irradiated after being ordered to fly through mushroom clouds of
nuclear bombs to collect samples.
Film badges worn by the men recorded the amount of radiation they were exposed to.
"Eric had a dose equivalent to 190 years of background radiation," the newspaper said.
"John's was 107. The MoD's maximum safe dose was just 30."
Mr Denson's widow Shirley Denson, who is part of the group suing the MoD, said she
hoped the truth about the tests would finally be revealed.
"Hopefully this will mean they have to admit everything else," she told the newspaper.
"There were 20,000 others there. They and their families suffered just as badly.
"In reality they have no idea who had how much dose. Eric and John had records taken
but most had none. Those who had film badges for the explosions were made to hand
them in and they were never labelled to show who was wearing them."
Earlier this year, Australian nuclear test veterans said they would monitor the mass
compensation claim in Britain as they prepare to launch their own class action
against the federal government.
In June, the federal government announced it would provide free cancer tests and
treatment to about 100 Australian police who patrolled the British nuclear test site
at Maralinga up to 1988.
Only about 450 of the test veterans are still alive and many claim to have suffered
serious illness, including cancer, as a result of exposure to radiation during the
1950s tests.
The dramatic admission, made after years of denials, features in papers filed with the High Court in London by Ministry of Defence lawyers.
The Sunday Mirror newspaper said the court papers reveal that the Ministry of
Defence now believes that nuclear tests were responsible for the deaths of some
British servicemen.
However, the MoD insists that only 159 men were affected out of the 20,000 who were
present.
About 800 former servicemen from Britain, New Zealand and Fiji earlier this year
launched a multi-million dollar lawsuit against the MoD, claiming they had been
exposed to dangerous levels of radiation during tests at sites including Maralinga
in South Australia and Christmas Island.
While the case is not due to start until January, court documents seen by the
newspaper show that two British Royal Air Force servicemen Eric Denson and John
Brothers were irradiated after being ordered to fly through mushroom clouds of
nuclear bombs to collect samples.
Film badges worn by the men recorded the amount of radiation they were exposed to.
"Eric had a dose equivalent to 190 years of background radiation," the newspaper said.
"John's was 107. The MoD's maximum safe dose was just 30."
Mr Denson's widow Shirley Denson, who is part of the group suing the MoD, said she
hoped the truth about the tests would finally be revealed.
"Hopefully this will mean they have to admit everything else," she told the newspaper.
"There were 20,000 others there. They and their families suffered just as badly.
"In reality they have no idea who had how much dose. Eric and John had records taken
but most had none. Those who had film badges for the explosions were made to hand
them in and they were never labelled to show who was wearing them."
Earlier this year, Australian nuclear test veterans said they would monitor the mass
compensation claim in Britain as they prepare to launch their own class action
against the federal government.
In June, the federal government announced it would provide free cancer tests and
treatment to about 100 Australian police who patrolled the British nuclear test site
at Maralinga up to 1988.
Only about 450 of the test veterans are still alive and many claim to have suffered
serious illness, including cancer, as a result of exposure to radiation during the
1950s tests.