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GHM date : 08/01/2001 ![]() |
Home Page PRESS RELEASE Subject:
Weapons of Depleted Uranium in Greece (too) 8 January 2001
Greek
Helsinki Monitor (GHM)
calls upon all involved institutions – political parties, media,
scientific institutions, etc. – to responsibly and impartially
deal with the extremely grave matter of munitions containing depleted uranium,
used or stored, in Greece or abroad. Should there be incontrovertible scientific
proof of their long-term serious adverse effects, it must lead to the
prosecution of all those parties responsible in initiating and/or cooperating
and/or tolerating their use, wherever they are, no matter how powerful they are
(for example, all member-states of NATO share responsibility for its actions).
At the same time, future use of such munitions must be banned. In addition, the
Greek government has an immediate obligation to disclose the number of such
munitions currently in its possession, and proceed with transparency to withdraw
them. On this occasion, Greece is called upon to ratify forthwith the
International Mine Ban Treaty, which it has signed, given reports that it, too,
possesses antipersonnel mines containing depleted uranium. The Convention has
been ratified by more than 100 states – not Greece among them! Specifically,
it has been public knowledge for years that Greece purchased 504 similar
antipersonnel mines (ADAM M692 worth $2.6 million) from the U.S. prior
to 1992, when a moratorium on the export of antipersonnel mines was put into
effect. At the same time, Greece is reported to host additional landmines as
part of its allied commitments. This data is contained in reports
published by Human Rights Watch in 1997, available on the following websites: http://www.hrw.org/hrw/campaigns/mines/III.4.exports.html and http://www.hrw.org/hrw/reports/2000/uslm/USALM007-05.htm The reports are based in part on official documents obtained from the U.S. Department of Defense by the Human Rights Watch Arms Project under the Freedom of Information Act. These munitions containing depleted uranium appear to be of a different type than what was reported in today’s press as Greece’s reported holdings of 40,000 projectiles containing the same material. |
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