Page 1 of 1

Sharbot Lake Rejects Offer

PostPosted: Fri Jul 20, 2007 10:43 am
by Oscar
Sharbot Lake Rejects Offer

To: Nilson,J. Min.Env. ; Baird, J. MP-Env. ; Breitkreuz, G. MP ; Clement, T. Min.Health ; NDP Caucus ; Premier Calvert ; Prime Minister Harper ; Taylor, L. Min. Health

Sent: Friday, July 20, 2007 10:36 AM

==========================
Sharbot Lake Rejects offer

http://verbena19.wordpress.com/2007/07/ ... rbot-lake/

July 19, 2007

In Sharbot Lake within the past couple of months a small number of the Algonquins from the Ardoch First Nation repatriated their unceded traditional lands, still currently used by Natives and Non-Natives for hunting and fishing.

In the same area in Northern Ontario, a corporation called FRONTENAC VENTURES has been "testing" the area for "possible" uranium mining for a few years. The area they repatriated is currently under negotiations with CANADA. However these negotiations are "on hold" by CANADA. Yet FRONTENAC still has a license to carry on with their "testing".

Yesterday Frontenac Ventures made a financial offer to the Algonquins of Ardoch First Nation.

This financial offer was flat out rejected by the Algonquins. No amount of money can ever compensate them for the likelihood of death, cancer, mutated births, still births, sterilization and other health risks that will arise as a direct result of uranium mining.

The health risks are too great for our future generations.

The environmental damage will be substantial and unstoppable. Why take the risk with any of our children? The responsibility of our people is to maintain life for our future generations. That's all aspects of life. The plant life, animal life and human life.

We are born with a responsibility to protect life, no matter what the cost is to us.

The Algonquins need our support as they are undertaking a HUGE responsibility. They are fighting to protect practically the whole watershed of Northeastern Ontario.

Everyone connected to that watershed will benefit, when the Algonquins are successful.

When asked about the financial offer one Algonquin stated, "...we can not be bought. (the land repatriation is) Not about money..."

Janie Jamieson

To help contact:

Chief Paula Sherman 613-279-1970 [
mailto: paulasherman@trentu.ca

Bob Lovelace at 613-374-5598, Cell 613-532-2166;

Harold Perry 613-479-5534;

Lynn Daniluk 613-268-2746 Cell 614-267-0539;

Ormond Lee of the settler committee 613-267-7584].

Post by MNN Mohawk Nation News,
http://www.mohawknationnews.com/

www.mohawknationnews.com.

Society of Fools!

PostPosted: Thu Oct 18, 2007 8:15 am
by Oscar
October 18, 2007

Dear Editor:

How many people care about the future of their grandchildren and of everyone else's grandchildren as much as Donna Dillman does? (Community Coalition Against Mining Uranium, October 8, 2007 http://www.ccamu.ca/)

How many times will this scenario be repeated: across Saskatchewan (the leader in supplying the planet with KILLER uranium), across Canada (Alberta, New Brunswick, Newfoundland all want in on the $$$ action), around the world (many countries have the wisdom to say NO to NUKES!) - unless and until we, the people, stop the insanity of uranium expansion?

Canada needs this kind of economic development - at any price! We are so desperately poor that we blindly allow our government, bullied or bribed by the uranium industry, to continue down this suicidal yellow brick road - deaf and dumb to the reality of what we're doing - uncaring about the future!

Do we care about babies horribly deformed as a result of their fathers (soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan and wherever else the war machine touches down) being exposed to Depleted Uranium from Saskatchewan's wilderness? What about the millions of local residents, who 20 or 30 years from now, will be diagnosed with horrific cancers because of their exposure to this same Depleted Uranium? What about the soldiers coming home - the ones not in boxes - who can expect the same diagnoses?

We are a society of fools!


Elaine Hughes
Archerwill, SK
(306) 323-4938

PS - Dr. Harding's latest book, Canada's Deadly Secret, unveils the dark side of Saskatchewan's uranium story...check it out!

PostPosted: Thu Oct 18, 2007 5:58 pm
by Oscar
Statement by Dr. Gordon Edwards, President,
Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Responsibility September 17, 2007


As a scientist, educator, and citizen, I fully support the Algonquin peoples for blockading the Sharbot Lake site in order to prevent uranium exploration and mining. The Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Responsibility, of which I am President, also supports this action.

The brave men and women who are blockading the Sharbot Lake site are not only protecting their own land, they are also protecting the Ottawa river and the entire Ottawa region from radioactive contamination.

Uranium ore bodies are among the deadliest mineral deposits on earth. They harbour large quantities of dangerous radioactive materials. Exploration and mining activities liberate these poisons into the air we breathe, the water we drink, and the food we eat.
Uranium ore contains not only large quantities of uranium, but equally
large inventories of the radioactive “decay products” of uranium, including radium, radon gas, polonium-210, and dozens of other radioactive poisons.

In the 1920’s radium sold for $100,000 per gram. By the 1940’s the market for radium had dried up. Too many people had died from bone cancer, anemia, leukemia and head cancers caused by microscopic quantities of radium. The British Columbia Medical Association has described radium as “a superb carcinogen”.

Yet mining companies routinely discard large quantities of radium in their radioactive dumping grounds called uranium tailings piles. From there the radium can migrate into the food chain and the ground water over periods of thousands of years. By the late 1970’s, the entire Serpent River system stretching 55 miles downstream from the Elliot Lake uranium mines was contaminated with radium from abandoned mines.

Polonium-210 is also left over from uranium mining. It is dumped into the tailings piles in quantities whose radioactivity is equal to that of the uranium itself. The deadliness of polonium-210 was revealed through the gruesome murder of Alexander Litvinenko in London, England last year. It is billions of times more toxic than cyanide. It attaches itself to the red blood cells and targets all the soft organs of the body.

During uranium exploration and mining, huge quantities of radon gas are also released into the air, and dissolved in surface waters. The US Surgeon General has determined that radon is the second leading cause of lung cancer after cigarette smoking; tens of thousands of Americans die every year from exposure to radon gas.

When radon gas is released from a uranium mine, it deposits solid radioactive fallout – including polonium-210 – on the ground for hundreds of miles downwind from the mine site. Even during exploration, each drill-hole acts as a chimney which vents radon gas into the air from deep underground.

I salute the Algonquin peoples for trying to do what the government should have been doing all along – protecting the health and safety of the people of the Ottawa region by prohibiting uranium exploration and mining in this beautiful region of the province.

Much Ado about A Lot: Uranium Mining in Canada

PostPosted: Fri Oct 19, 2007 10:10 am
by Oscar
Much Ado about A Lot: Uranium Mining in Canada

http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/tarachansky131007.html
by Lia Tarachansky October 13, 2007

Opposition to uranium mining has once again become a major topic of coverage by the media. From Australia to Canada, people are taking a stand against corporations that mine uranium and in particular against their mining on Native land. Today, the Ardoch and Shabot blockade brings attention to the potential uranium mine opening between Kingston and Ottawa. To make it clearer why so many are objecting to the mining of uranium, I have decided to investigate why so many are mining it in the first place.

Processed uranium is used for nuclear energy and weapons. Previously it was recycled, largely from old Soviet nuclear weapons. This source has now run out and in recent years the price of uranium skyrocketed from $7 to $145 per pound, according to the Colorado Springs Business Journal. In North America, U.S. uranium mining is concentrated in Colorado while Canadian mining in northern Saskatchewan and Ontario.

Its processing, called "enrichment," leaves behind a depleted form of uranium (DU), used both for military and non-military (civilian) purposes. These include anti-tank artillery and coating of medical equipment such as x-ray and gamma radiation technology. The American military used DU in Iraq, the Former Republic of Yugoslavia, and in Afghanistan releasing close to 900 tones into the environment.

The radioactive toxicity of weapons-grade and energy-grade uranium has now seeped into common knowledge. Beyond radioactivity, though, uranium has enormous impacts on human health and has faced brutal criticism from the scientific community. Similar criticism was given to the disposal and the processing of uranium. Nonetheless, little media and government attention has been given to the effects of uranium mining in particular.

While decaying, uranium emits alpha, beta, and gamma radiation. When this radiation enters the body it lead to an increased risk of cancers, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). By releasing this radiation, uranium decomposes, but so slowly that it takes over 760 million years to half in size. With a footprint like that, the effects of its mining, processing, use, and disposal have an unfathomable and effectively permanent impact on all life.

Unlike popular belief, uranium is mostly dangerous in its gross form, not because of its radioactivity. Once it or its depleted form enter the body through airways or the digestive tract, a number of harmful medical effects begin. In fact, visualizing this is easiest at sites of uranium mining, as miners are directly exposed to the resulting silica dust, and residents in areas neighboring the mines are exposed to contamination from the pollution of their water or air.

"Aboriginal communities suffer very distinctly from the mining because they are remote from urban centres and experience the effects firsthand," informed Marlene Laroque of the National Aboriginal Health Organization.

"These communities don't have as many resources as urban centres do to clean up the pollution."

Because of the location of the mines, there have been a disproportionate number of aboriginal workers as compared to those in other industries. Aboriginal communities are not only the ones suffering the brunt of the damage, but are also demonstrative of the significance of the effects. Navajo Aboriginals in the U.S. for example historically had a significantly low incidence of lung cancers. In their population the skyrocketing of lung cancers in uranium miners of the 1950s really brought home the point. Further, a 1949 discovery in the United States linked the elevated lung cancer rates with inhaled radon gas particles. This, though, did not push the government to create regulations or impose bans on the mining industry even though studies have been demonstrating these results
since the 1920s and 1930s. Over 20% of the miners in that period were Navajos as are Metis in Canada today.

Along with the environmental pollution that ensues, social and political effects follow. This is especially true of aboriginal communities as their lives are more directly linked with nature.

According to Marlene Laroque, this means that their lives are directly impacted by resource extraction. [The corporations] "clear-cut for roads, and go into lakes and rivers. This leads to degradation of the traditional living and hunting territories because the food supply is contaminated and access is limited."

The food cycle leads to people internalizing the extracted compounds through consuming contaminated fish or game. Once inside the body, uranium changes physiology beginning with kidney damage (termed "nephrotoxicity"). Medically it works something like this: a toxic substance enters the body, the body tries to get rid of the substance, and the body's drainage system becomes disrupted and clogged up. In the case of uranium mining, this substance is often radon, a byproduct of the mining itself. Radon has a long ugly history in medical research for causing multiple myelomas: otherwise called Kahler's Disease. Here, immune cells of the bone marrow, normally producing antibodies, become cancerous.1 The effect of this, according to the Canadian Cancer Society, is infection of organs, weakness, confusion, bone pain, anemia, and potential loss of bowel or bladder control. Other symptoms are carpal tunnel, diseasing of the body's nerves, and leukemia.2

When dust produced from mining uranium is inhaled the first impacted organ is the lung. Cancerous effects are particularly significant here because cells reproduce often and continuously. Interrupting this delicate balance means cells begin forming tumors, which explains the high level of lung cancers among uranium miners.3 Other organs demonstrating elevated cancers in uranium miners are gallbladder and bile duct.4

Studies on animals have been confirming the human trends. Multiple international laboratories have shown that uranium builds up in the brain.5 This buildup leads to the brain's chemical messengers, thanks to which the brain gets thrown completely out of balance.

Other studies, such as that performed by Spanish scientists of the Rovira i Virgili University confirmed others' results. Their experiment on rats has shown not only the previously studied kidney damage but also that uranium disrupts the chemical balance of the body.6 An interesting outcome of their research is not only confirmation of almost 90 years of scientific inquiry but their discovery of melatonin as treatment for uranium toxicity. Though remarkable, it is a band-aid solution that reduces kidney damage in rats exposed to contaminated water but fails to restore the chemical balance disrupted in the first place. This damage is irreparable.

Also worrisome is contamination passed through water. A contaminated water-well in rural Northwestern Connecticut from which young children had accidentally drunk. Levels of uranium in the water were measured to be almost 40 times higher than the EPA classifies as toxic. Some children took over 3 months to recover.7

Colorado's Navahos have spearheaded resistance against such pollutions. The only tangible reprieve for their suffering came in 1952 when the Atomic Energy Commission recommended mining ventilation, but it has done nothing to pressure corporations to obey. Ventilation of uranium mines only begun in 1967 at Union Carbide and did not become universal as even the government agencies claimed it was too costly. Legal battles took decades to resolve.

Some of these include lawsuits against the Nuclear Regulatory Commissions for its neglect of the miners' health despite its knowledge of the danger of their occupational exposure. For consolation, the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act was created, which allocated $100,000 to each of the miners' families. This caused a temporary drawdown in Colorado's uranium mining industry and shifted some of the production to Canada. According to Natural Resources Canada, we now produce 29% of the world's uranium.

The growth of the Canadian industry is a response to commercial profit-making opportunities. A decrease in supply plus an increase in demand equals higher prices. In the face of the horrendous, effectively permanent destructiveness to current and future generations, the continual extraction of uranium is dumbfounding. It is a demonstration of the corporate world's war against nature and marginalized communities.

This war, destructive to all communities, is exemplified by a classist separation between those who benefit from uranium mining, the corporations, and those who significantly suffer from it, the working class and aboriginal communities. From Russia to China, Australia to Canada, uranium is mined globally, and its impact on the world accumulates. In response to this, the struggle of those who dare to rise up against all odds is to be celebrated and supported. The resistance must spread faster than the pollution.
------------------------------
1 L. Tomasek, E. Kunz, S.C. Darby, A. J. Swerdlow, V. Placek, "Radon Exposure and Cancers Other than Lung Cancer among Uranium Miners in West Bohemia," The Lancet 341.8850 (April 1993), pp. 919-923.
2 Ibid.
3 A. V. Malashenko, "The Lung Cancer in the Uranium Miners of Sedimentary Deposits," Meditsinskaya Radiologiya i Radiatsionnaya Bezolasnost 60.6 (2005), pp. 10-12.
4 Tomasek, et al., op. cit.
5 V. Linares, D. J. Sanchez, M. Belles, L. Albine, M. Gomez, J. K. Domingo, "Pro-oxidant Effects in the Brain of Rats Concurrently Exposed to Uranium and Stress," Toxicology Journal 236.1-2 (July 2007), pp.82-91.
6 M. Belles, V. Linares, M. Luisa-Albina, J. Sirvent, D. Sanchez, and J.L. Domingo, "Melatonin Reduces Uranium Induced Nephrotoxicity in Rats," Journal of Pineal Research 43.1 (August 2007), pp.87-95
7 H.S. Magdo, J. Forman, N. Graber, B. Newman, K. Klein, L. Satlin, R. W. Amler, J. A. Winston, P. J. Landrigan, "Grand Rounds: Nephrotoxicity in a Young Child Exposed to Uranium from Contaminated Well-Water," Environmental Health Perspectives 115. 8 (August 2007), pp.1237-41.