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Iraq Says
UK and US Blocking Cancer Drugs
Iraq has stated to the UN that the United States and Britain are
waging a campaign of genocide against its people by blocking medical
supplies crucial to the treatment of cancer.
In a letter to U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, Iraqi Foreign Minister
Naji Sabri said depleted uranium (DU) ammunition used by the U.S.-led
forces during the 1991 Gulf War have caused a rise in cancer cases
in Iraq. “The United States and Britain are engrossed in a policy
of genocide against the people of Iraq and disregard the facts about
their crimes of contaminating the environment of Iraq and its neighbouring
countries,” Sabri said in a copy of the letter faxed to Reuters
last week.
Their envoys to the (U.N.) Sanctions Committee are putting on hold
contracts for medicines and medical equipment for the treatment of
people with cancer, claiming they have dual usage,” Sabri said.
He said he held the two countries responsible for “contaminating
the environment in the centre and south of Iraq”, saying “these
effects will continue for generations to come.” “The catastrophic
effects of the use of depleted uranium against Iraqi civilians...
are reflected in the great rise in cancer cases, strange diseases
and congenital deformities previously unknown in Iraq,” Sabri
said.
He attached to the letter a list of 21 contracts for medical supplies
for treating cancer blocked by the United States and Britain.
The United States and Britain bear a double responsibility by preventing
the delivery of medicines and medical equipment to treat victims of
the aggression they launched against Iraq in 1991,” Sabri said.
He urged Annan to intervene and release those contracts on hold “so
that specialised medical parties can begin the treatment of the victims
of the crime of the use of depleted uranium.”
Last year, the World Health Organisation began an in-depth study into
the health impact of the shells used in Iraq. But in November, after
lobbying from Washington, the U.N. General Assembly voted down an
Iraqi proposal for a U.N.-backed study into the effects of depleted
uranium shells.
A report by British Royal Society scientists published last month
said top soil in areas heavily contaminated with DU should be removed
and water quality monitored for contamination.
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From CADU News 11 : Summer 2002
Read more articles about Depleted Uranium
in Iraq
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