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WOMENS INTERNATIONAL
LEAGUE FOR PEACE AND FREEDOM
Indigenous People and the Nuclear
Age
Making the Connections
Of the eight nations in the world that have detonated nuclear weapons
during the last 55 years, five have used the sacred land of indigenous
peoples. The United States, Russia, Britain, France and China have
tested their nuclear might on lands held sacred by the
people of First Nations. The Western Shoshone nation of North America,
the Marshall and other South Pacific Islanders, Australian Aboriginals,
the Kazakhs, and Tibetans are but a few of those whose land has
been consistently contaminated with nuclear poison.
The Western Shoshone tribe of North America was guaranteed
ownership of a huge portion of what is now Nevada, Idaho and some
of California in the 1863 Treaty of Ruby Valley. Contrary to the
expressed desires of the Shoshone people, over 700 nuclear tests
were detonated at the Nevada Test Site which is part of this land.
The US Department of Energy has chosen Yucca Mountain, also in Nevada
- which is on the land of the Paiute nation - as a burial ground
for high level radioactive waste from US civilian nuclear power
plants. The mountain has at least 35 active earthquake fault lines
running through it.
Native nations have been part of the story of nuclear contamination
since the dawn of the atomic age. Indigenous peoples have been disportionately
affected by the international nuclear weapons and power industries.
The Marshall Islanders of the South Pacific face a higher
level of cancer and birth defects than normal. Bikini, Enewetak
and Rongelap atolls were among the most seriously contaminated.
On March 1, 1954 the Bravo Test, the first hydrogen bomb, was detonated.
One thousand times more powerful than the Hiroshima explosion, its
cloud rose 40 kilometers and after ten minutes, had a diameter of
120 kilometers. Immediately following the Bravo Test, many islanders
were surprised to see what they interpreted as snow
on Rongelap atoll. Children began to play in the white powder that
fell from the sky, although this was not the snow that they had
heard stories of from the Christian missions who had already inflitrated
the local islands. Later that day, the same children became sick
with stomach pains and itchy eyes which, as the days followed, turned
into burning, blistering skin and loss of hair. Lijon Eknilang was
among them.
"My own health has suffered as a result of radiation poisoning.
I cannot have children. I have had seven miscarriages. On one of
these occasions, I miscarried after four months. The child I miscarried
was severely deformed - it had only one eye. In 1978, I had thyroid
surgery to remove nodules
I have lumps in my breasts, as
well as kidney and stomach problems, for which I am receiving treatment.
My eyesight is blurred, and everything looks foggy to me" (IPPNW,
Radioactive Heaven and Earth: the health effects of nuclear weapons
testing in, on and above the earth, p. 23).
Australian Aboriginals suffer from the on-going effects
of British nuclear testing which was conducted in the Maralinga
Lands of the Victoria Desert. Archie Barton, the administrator of
the Maralinga Tjarutja (Land Rights Council) describes the experience
of his people.
"In 1952, the Aboriginals who had inhabited the Maralinga
Lands were placed in a mission at Yalata, several hundred miles
South of their tribal land
. Elders tried to return to their
land in 1955, but were sent back to Yalta by nuclear test personnel.
As an alternative home for the Maralinga people the Yalata Mission
failed, [it] thus caused [the] dislocating [of] traditions which
resulted in the highest rate of alcohol-related illnesses and deaths
in any Australian community" (see Poison Fire Sacred Earth:
testimonies, lectures and conclusions, p. 175).
The Maralinga people finally returned to their land in 1990, but
like the natives of the South Pacific Islands, they returned to
a contaminated home, with their traditional ways of life having
been forever corrupted by the age of nuclear technology.
In addition to the radioactive contamination of previous nuclear
tests conducted by the UK, British Nuclear Fuels is currently involved
in formal negotiations to construct the Pangea waste dump on sacred
Aboriginal land. Both federal and state legislature in Australia
have rejected this proposal, nevertheless, the marketing initiative
of Pangea continues.
In 1977, Winona LaDuke, an Anishinaabe woman, summed up the plight
of indigenous people in connection to nuclear technology when she
told the German journalist, Claus Biegert that
"We are the target of the nuclear industry. We are the victims
of a nuclear neo-colonialism. Over seventy percent of the uranium
is mined on our land. If you continue as a journalist writing about
us then you should focus on the uranium issue" (see "Nuclear
Free Future Award" pamphlet, p. 4, Los Alamos 1999).
Many indigenous peoples recognize the sacredness of all life and
the sacredness of the earth and are opposed to the poisoning of
water, air and the land caused by nuclear technology. Indigenous
peoples attend the Non-Proliferation Treaty process and present
their case each year. Their interventions cover a spectrum of activities
necessary for nuclear weapons production - from the mining of uranium
to the testing of nuclear bombs to the dumping of radioactive waste
- much of which takes place on native lands.
Facts and Figures
Other affected communities include:
- The Kazakhs. Of the 713 tests conducted by Russia, 467 were
at the Kazakhstan Test Site.
- Tibetan people. Lop Nor, near Tibet in the Sinkiang Province
is home to the Uighur people, and also the place of Chinese nuclear
tests.
- The Sami. An indigenous community in Norway whose practice of
life as herds-people was radically altered by their (continuing)
experience of Chernobyl. Lichen, a main food source for reindeer,
in their region was heavily contaminated by radioactive rain,
causing the contamination of their herds.
To date, 8 countries have conducted approximately 2,051 nuclear
tests under water, underground, in the atmosphere and in space.
This represents an average of one nuclear test every nine days
for the last 50 years.
Nuclear tests on native lands include:
- A total of 106 nuclear tests have been conducted by the US in
the South Pacific, plus an additional 24 tests in the Christmas
Islands just off Australia.
- 12 atmospheric tests were detonated in Australia between 1952
and 1957 by the UK, three at Monte Bello, two at Emu Field and
seven at Maralinga.
- 14 nuclear tests were conducted in Algeria by the French, 4
atmospheric and 10 underground. From 1966 - 1990, a further 167
tests were conducted by the French on the atolls of Mururoa and
Fangataufa in Polynesia.
Worldwide, uranium mining has been the most hazardous step in
nuclear materials production, in terms of radiation doses and numbers
of people affected. It also is the step that generates the largest
volumes of waste material. Uranium for nuclear weapons has been
mined all over the world, from Australia to Zaire. Indigenous peoples
have been disproportionately affected by the health and environmental
impacts of uranium mining.

Open Pit Uranium Mine, Northern Saskatchewan, Canada
Photo by Robert Del Tredici, At Work in the Fields
of the Bomb, Harper & Row 1987.
What you can do
Subscribe to the following newsletters/journals to be kept up
to date on nuclear issues concerning the production of nuclear power,
the manufacture of nuclear weapons and nuclear waste clean-up
and the effect on indigenous communities.
Indigenous Environmental Network <www.ienearth.org>
Shundahai Network <www.shundahai.org>
Mirrar Nation Opposed to the Jabiluka Uranium Mine (Australia)
<www.mirrar.net>
Bellona Foundation <www.bellona.no>
IEER/Science and Democratic Action <www.ieer.org>
The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists <www.thebulletin.org>
Become a member of, or provide financial support for, national
and international anti-nuclear organizations. Contact:
Womens International League for Peace and Freeedom <www.reachngcriticalwill.org>
Nuclear Information and Resource Service <www.nirs.org>
Greenpeace <www.greenpeace.org/~nuclear/>
Plutonium Free Future <http://www.coopcomm.org/nonukes/>
International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War
<www.ippnw.org>
North European Nuclear Information Group <www.users.zetnet.co.uk/n-base/>
World Information Service on Energy <http://antenna.nl/wise>
Support your local anti-nuclear activists, either by becoming involved
in actions, letter writing campaigns, lobbying state and federal
representatives or by providing monetary support.
Trident Ploughshares <www.gn.apc.org/tp2000/html/>
Abolition 2000 <www.abolition2000.org>
Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament <http://www.cnduk.org/welcome.htm>
Socio Ecological Union (Russian language site) <http://cci.glasnet.ru/antinuclear.html>
Become a government watchdog. Contact:
U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Environmental Management
<www.em.doe.gov/>
U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs <www.doi.gov/bureau-indian-affairs.html>
Or find equivalent organizations in your country of residence
References Cited/Further Reading
Makhijani, Arjun, Howard Hu, Katherine Yih, editors. Nuclear
Wastelands: a Global Guide to Nuclear Weapons Production and Its
Health and Environmental Effects (written in association with
the Special Commission of International Physicians for the Prevention
of Nuclear War and the Institute for Energy and Environmental Research).
Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press, 1995.
Norris, Robert S. and William M. Arkin. Nuclear Notebook:
Known nuclear tests worldwide 1945-98 inThe Bulletin of
Atomic Scientists. Educational Foundation for Nuclear Science,
Nov/Dec Issue, 1998.
Stephens, Sharon. Physical Reproduction in a Post-Chernobyl
Norwegian Sami Community in Fayed D. Ginsburg and Rayna Rapp,
editors. Conceiving the New World Order: the Global Politics
of Reproduction. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995.
The Special Commission of International Physicians for the Prevention
of Nuclear War and the Institute for Energy and Environmental Research.
Radioactive Heaven and Earth: the health effects of nuclear weapons
testing in, on and above the earth. New York: Apex Press, 1991.
The World Uranium Hearing. Poison Fire Sacred Earth: testimonies,
lectures and conclusions. Munich: published in-house by The
World Uranium Hearing, 1993.
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