Saturday, May 28, 2022
  • Contact
Reyox News
Women's Fashion Category
ADVERTISEMENT
  • Home
  • World
    COVID-19 spike: Fed Govt considers another lockdown

    COVID-19 spike: Fed Govt considers another lockdown

    World Bank approves $1.5bn for Nigeria to reduce poverty

    World Bank approves $1.5bn for Nigeria to reduce poverty

    These Delicious Balinese Street Foods You Need To Try Right Now

    Three Arrested After Masked Youths Launch Firebomb Attack On Synagogue

    Barack Obama and Family Visit Balinese Paddy Fields During Vacation

    California Fires: This Is What Happens When You Breathe In Smoke

    Trump Ambassador Beat And ‘Kidnapped’ Woman In Watergate Cover-up: Reports

  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel

    Nigerian women can lead

    COVID-19 spike: Fed Govt considers another lockdown

    COVID-19 spike: Fed Govt considers another lockdown

    Research Reveals: Drinking Coffee Could Protect Against Some Types of Cancer

    These Delicious Balinese Street Foods You Need To Try Right Now

    Three Arrested After Masked Youths Launch Firebomb Attack On Synagogue

    Fashion Girls! These Are the 17 Chic Flats Everyone Will Want in 2018

    Trending Tags

    • Bitcoin
    • Champions League
    • Explore Bali
    • Golden Globes 2018
    • Grammy Awards
    • Harbolnas
  • Business
    Son testifies as man beats wife to death over N2,000 demand in Edo

    Son testifies as man beats wife to death over N2,000 demand in Edo

    How Fulani Herdsmen Invaded Our Farmlands With AK-47s Strapped To Their Cows, Threatened Mayhem—Ogoni Community

    How Fulani Herdsmen Invaded Our Farmlands With AK-47s Strapped To Their Cows, Threatened Mayhem—Ogoni Community

    World Bank approves $1.5bn for Nigeria to reduce poverty

    World Bank approves $1.5bn for Nigeria to reduce poverty

    Bitcoin Is ‘Definitely Not A Fraud,’ CEO of Mobile-Only Bank Revolut Says

    U.S. Online Sales Surge, Shoppers Throng Stores On Thanksgiving Evening

    Trump Ambassador Beat And ‘Kidnapped’ Woman In Watergate Cover-up: Reports

    Trending Tags

    • Market Stories
    • Bitcoin
    • Litecoin
    • Harbolnas
    • United Stated
  • Entertainment

    Bride refuses to smile as her husband sprays her Naira notes at their traditional wedding

    Jealous student jailed for more than 11-years for running over his girlfriend, 18, at a party

    Angel made advances to me 5 times in the shower, but I rejected her — Niyi alleges

    Ugandan presidential candidate, Bobi Wine, calls for release of Omah Lay, Tems

    Ugandan presidential candidate, Bobi Wine, calls for release of Omah Lay, Tems

    Fashion Girls! These Are the 17 Chic Flats Everyone Will Want in 2018

    Barack Obama and Family Visit Balinese Paddy Fields During Vacation

    Trending Tags

    • Golden Globes 2018
    • Grammy Awards
    • Explore Bali
    • Champions League
    • Harbolnas
  • Sports

    UNICEF tasks journalists on public advocacy on adequate breastfeeding

    Transfer: PSG in talks with Lionel Messi after Barcelona exit

    Olympics: Nigeria’s Enekwechi loses in men’s shot put, America’s Crouser wins gold

    Olympics: Nigeria’s Enekwechi loses in men’s shot put, America’s Crouser wins gold

    This Easy Cardio Swap Will Help You Train for A Half Marathon

    John Browny Could Have Been The Super Bowl MVP If The Gagak Hadn’t Blown It

    Betterment Moves Beyond Robo-Advising with Human Financial Planners

    Trending Tags

    • Champions League
    • Explore Bali
    • Harbolnas
    • United Stated
    • Market Stories
    • Litecoin
No Result
View All Result
Reyox News
  • Home
  • World
    COVID-19 spike: Fed Govt considers another lockdown

    COVID-19 spike: Fed Govt considers another lockdown

    World Bank approves $1.5bn for Nigeria to reduce poverty

    World Bank approves $1.5bn for Nigeria to reduce poverty

    These Delicious Balinese Street Foods You Need To Try Right Now

    Three Arrested After Masked Youths Launch Firebomb Attack On Synagogue

    Barack Obama and Family Visit Balinese Paddy Fields During Vacation

    California Fires: This Is What Happens When You Breathe In Smoke

    Trump Ambassador Beat And ‘Kidnapped’ Woman In Watergate Cover-up: Reports

  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel

    Nigerian women can lead

    COVID-19 spike: Fed Govt considers another lockdown

    COVID-19 spike: Fed Govt considers another lockdown

    Research Reveals: Drinking Coffee Could Protect Against Some Types of Cancer

    These Delicious Balinese Street Foods You Need To Try Right Now

    Three Arrested After Masked Youths Launch Firebomb Attack On Synagogue

    Fashion Girls! These Are the 17 Chic Flats Everyone Will Want in 2018

    Trending Tags

    • Bitcoin
    • Champions League
    • Explore Bali
    • Golden Globes 2018
    • Grammy Awards
    • Harbolnas
  • Business
    Son testifies as man beats wife to death over N2,000 demand in Edo

    Son testifies as man beats wife to death over N2,000 demand in Edo

    How Fulani Herdsmen Invaded Our Farmlands With AK-47s Strapped To Their Cows, Threatened Mayhem—Ogoni Community

    How Fulani Herdsmen Invaded Our Farmlands With AK-47s Strapped To Their Cows, Threatened Mayhem—Ogoni Community

    World Bank approves $1.5bn for Nigeria to reduce poverty

    World Bank approves $1.5bn for Nigeria to reduce poverty

    Bitcoin Is ‘Definitely Not A Fraud,’ CEO of Mobile-Only Bank Revolut Says

    U.S. Online Sales Surge, Shoppers Throng Stores On Thanksgiving Evening

    Trump Ambassador Beat And ‘Kidnapped’ Woman In Watergate Cover-up: Reports

    Trending Tags

    • Market Stories
    • Bitcoin
    • Litecoin
    • Harbolnas
    • United Stated
  • Entertainment

    Bride refuses to smile as her husband sprays her Naira notes at their traditional wedding

    Jealous student jailed for more than 11-years for running over his girlfriend, 18, at a party

    Angel made advances to me 5 times in the shower, but I rejected her — Niyi alleges

    Ugandan presidential candidate, Bobi Wine, calls for release of Omah Lay, Tems

    Ugandan presidential candidate, Bobi Wine, calls for release of Omah Lay, Tems

    Fashion Girls! These Are the 17 Chic Flats Everyone Will Want in 2018

    Barack Obama and Family Visit Balinese Paddy Fields During Vacation

    Trending Tags

    • Golden Globes 2018
    • Grammy Awards
    • Explore Bali
    • Champions League
    • Harbolnas
  • Sports

    UNICEF tasks journalists on public advocacy on adequate breastfeeding

    Transfer: PSG in talks with Lionel Messi after Barcelona exit

    Olympics: Nigeria’s Enekwechi loses in men’s shot put, America’s Crouser wins gold

    Olympics: Nigeria’s Enekwechi loses in men’s shot put, America’s Crouser wins gold

    This Easy Cardio Swap Will Help You Train for A Half Marathon

    John Browny Could Have Been The Super Bowl MVP If The Gagak Hadn’t Blown It

    Betterment Moves Beyond Robo-Advising with Human Financial Planners

    Trending Tags

    • Champions League
    • Explore Bali
    • Harbolnas
    • United Stated
    • Market Stories
    • Litecoin
No Result
View All Result
Reyox News
No Result
View All Result
Men's Fashion Category
Home Latest News

France-Algeria relations: The lingering fallout from nuclear tests in the Sahara – BBC News

Reyoxnews by Reyoxnews
January 16, 2022
in Latest News
0
585
SHARES
3.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare to WhatsApp
ADVERTISEMENT
Advertisements

The continued fallout from the nuclear tests carried out by France in the desert of its former colony, Algeria, continues to pollute relations between the two countries more than 60 years later, as Maher Mezahi reports from Algiers.
On the morning of 13 February 1960, just 45 minutes after the French army detonated an atomic bomb as a test in the Algerian Sahara, President Charles de Gaulle sent a message to his army minister.
"Hoorah for France," read the note.
"This morning she is stronger and prouder. From the bottom of my heart, I thank you and those who have achieved this magnificent success."
The detonation of the plutonium-filled bomb – known as Blue Jerboa – and the subsequent 16 explosions of nuclear weapons in Algeria were seen as a display of French strength and development.
At the time, Algeria was a French colony.
Yet the atmosphere on the ground, where 6,500 French engineers, soldiers and researchers worked on the project alongside 3,500 Algerian manual labourers, was less celebratory.
The bomb had been placed on top of a 100m-tall tower before the explosion.
Witnesses recount feeling the ground shake and, when permitted to face the blast, seeing a gigantic mushroom cloud.
The extreme temperatures near the blast transformed the sand into black shards.
Blue Jerboa was three times more powerful than the bomb dropped by the US on Nagasaki, Japan, in 1945, which destroyed everything within 1.6km (one mile) of the explosion.
The detonation of such a powerful weapon in south-western Algeria was justified by General Charles Ailleret, who was in charge of the operation and said "the total absence of all signs of life" was "essential in choosing the site".
Yet dozens of kilometres away, the inhabitants of the town of Reggane begged to differ.
Abderrahmane Toumi's family moved to the oasis after the tests in 1965. But later in life he was so affected by the suffering of the local population that in 2010 he set up an association to fight for those who were suffering from the effects of nuclear radiation.
"In 1960 when the bomb detonated, there were more than 6,000 inhabitants. Reggane was not in the middle of nowhere," the 57 year-old told the BBC.
"From what we are told by researchers, long-term effects started around 20 years after the first bomb was detonated and they will continue to last for decades.
"Many of those who were contaminated have already passed away due to unknown medical causes. They were told they had rare illnesses but they didn't really know the specific nature of their illness," Mr Toumi explained.
Immediately after the Blue Jerboa blast, there were protests across the region as nuclear fallout from the bomb would be detected as far as Senegal, Ivory Coast, Burkina Faso and Sudan.
There was also a demonstration in Leipzig, in what was then East Germany, by Malian students there denouncing the test which took place just a few hundred kilometres from their hometowns.
After France signed the Comprehensive Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty, a 1998 French senate report stated that "French atmospheric explosions were the subject of increasing criticism from African countries neighbouring the Sahara".
"They did not understand why we would continue to use an obviously polluting technique despite all the precautions taken to minimize the fallout," the report said, without specifying what those precautions were.
After four tests above ground in the Reggane region, in 1961 the French authorities decided to conduct underground tests in In Ekker, 700km away in the picturesque Hoggar mountain range.
But even the underground tests caused pollution.
During the detonation of the bomb known as Beryl, for example, radioactive matter was spewed into the atmosphere because the underground shaft at the blast site was not properly sealed.
As the explosion shook the mountain range above, monitors quickly urged the officials away from the zone as the bomb had opened fissures in the mountain and nuclear waste seeped into the air.
Nine soldiers were heavily contaminated by the experiment, as were a slew of government officials who were invited to attend a viewing of the blast.
After more than a dozen underground nuclear tests near In Ekker, the French army shifted its experiments to French Polynesia in the Pacific Ocean.
Yet, the fallout from French nuclear experimentation in the Sahara continues to pollute French-Algerian relations.
Local researchers estimate that thousands of Algerians have suffered the effects of nuclear radiation across the Algerian Sahara, and many of the sites are yet to be decontaminated.
The issue has taken on even more importance in the wake of a decision by the two nations to establish a commission with the purpose of proposing measures that would ease relations, which are still shaped by 132 years of colonisation.
In his report on that relationship, commissioned by French President Emmanuel Macron, historian Benjamin Stora addressed the nuclear issue, saying that France and Algeria should work together to clean up the test sites.
But he did not talk much about compensation and his proposals were too vague for those Algerians who say they continue to suffer from the effects of the French tests.
"Stora is like a tailor. He sewed up exactly what France needs," laughs Mohamed Mahmoudi, a 49 year-old activist who believes he was exposed to radiation in the early 1990s while doing his military service near Reggane.
He says that at the time no-one told him of the risks of being in the region.
In an email sent to the BBC, the French foreign ministry said that "a radiological diagnosis of the various test areas at these sites has been established and shared with the Algerian authorities".
In 2010, the French parliament passed the Morin law which should, in theory, compensate victims of nuclear radiation in Algeria.
However, the law requires claimants to have been residents of the region while the tests were taking place and only recognises certain illnesses.
As a result, victims like Mr Mahmoudi do not qualify.
Nevertheless, he says he has helped document more than 800 eligible cases.
The Compensation Committee of Victims of Nuclear Tests, which was created by the Morin law, reports that only one of 545 cases where money has been paid was to an Algerian – all of the others are from French Polynesia.
In response, the French foreign ministry said that the country "will continue to examine the cases presented".
1830: France occupies Algiers
1848: After an uprising led by rebel leader Abd-el-Kader, Paris declares Algeria to be an integral part of France
1945: Thousands killed in pro-independence demonstrations in Sétif
1954-62: Algerian War of Independence
1962: Algeria becomes an independent state
1960-66: Nuclear tests allowed to continue after independence
In early February, Algerian General Bouzid Boufrioua launched a scathing attack on his French counterparts in the military magazine, El Djeich.
"France must come to terms with its historic responsibilities," he said and referred to a 2017 treaty on the prohibition of nuclear weapons, which no nuclear power signed or ratified.
"This is the first time that the international community has asked the nuclear powers to rectify the mistakes of the past."
For Mr Toumi, and the victims he speaks to on a daily basis, correcting errors of the past begins with decontaminating the polluted sites.
"There is nuclear waste underground and we do not even know where it is located," he says, referring to the fact that the Algerian government is yet to be handed complete maps of the French experiments in Reggane and In Ekker.
"Patients simply want to live in their hometowns without nuclear waste, that is all."
French nuclear tests 'affected 110,000 in Pacific'
France admits killing activist during Algerian War
France 'to return Algeria fighters' skulls'
Tortured for siding with France
Africa Today podcasts
Djokovic makes last-ditch visa appeal in Australia
Get away from shore – US and Japan warn on tsunami
Police in hostage stand-off at Texas synagogue
Vigilantes take on Kenya's avocado gangs
Is the pandemic entering its endgame in UK?
The inventor inspired by a near-death experience. VideoThe inventor inspired by a near-death experience
How an ancient sea dragon was dug up
Ruthless royals move to limit Andrew damage
What's UK PM to do when kids joke about his future?
What would happen if the whole world went vegan?
The downsides of being 'too attractive'
Body transformations kept strictly undercover…
Can they keep their progress hidden from their loved ones?
Why do good cops go bad?
Uncovering the story of one of America's most corrupt police units
© 2022 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.

source

You might also like

Retailer Missguided on brink of calling in administrators – The Guardian

How ICF is positioning for IT implementation growth – Washington Technology

Killing Nigeria: Government as Undertaker – Vanguard

Black Friday Top deals
Previous Post

50 Suspects Arrested In Connection With Imo Attacks – SaharaReporters.com

Next Post

Police arrest 2 “fake” EFCC officials in Delta – Vanguard

Reyoxnews

Reyoxnews

Related Posts

Latest News

Retailer Missguided on brink of calling in administrators – The Guardian

by Reyoxnews
May 28, 2022
Latest News

How ICF is positioning for IT implementation growth – Washington Technology

by Reyoxnews
May 28, 2022
Latest News

Killing Nigeria: Government as Undertaker – Vanguard

by Reyoxnews
May 28, 2022
Latest News

North-East racecourse backs couple's bid to raise £20k for breast cancer charity with Sahara trek – The Northern Echo

by Reyoxnews
May 28, 2022
Latest News

Alleged N96bn fraud: Amaechi, Wike disagree over Supreme Court judgment – Punch Newspapers

by Reyoxnews
May 28, 2022
Next Post

Police arrest 2 “fake” EFCC officials in Delta - Vanguard

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Black Friday Top deals

Recommended

What's Pushing Global Date Palm Sector So Far Ahead? Maghadi Dates, Ario, SAHARA DATES, GNS Pakistan, Barari Group, Haifa Dates, ALMoosawi, Atul Rajasthan Date Palm – Construction News Portal – Construction News Portal

February 6, 2022

Protest In Bauchi Community As Policeman Stabs Two To Death – SaharaReporters.com

March 27, 2022

Categories

  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Fashion
  • Food
  • Health
  • Latest News
  • Lifestyle
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • World

Don't miss it

Latest News

Retailer Missguided on brink of calling in administrators – The Guardian

May 28, 2022
Latest News

How ICF is positioning for IT implementation growth – Washington Technology

May 28, 2022
Latest News

Killing Nigeria: Government as Undertaker – Vanguard

May 28, 2022
Latest News

North-East racecourse backs couple's bid to raise £20k for breast cancer charity with Sahara trek – The Northern Echo

May 28, 2022
Latest News

Alleged N96bn fraud: Amaechi, Wike disagree over Supreme Court judgment – Punch Newspapers

May 28, 2022
Latest News

Wine Nation expands services with sit-in bar – Vanguard

May 28, 2022
Reyox News

We bring you the Current and update News in Africa & arround the Word

Learn more

Categories

  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Fashion
  • Food
  • Health
  • Latest News
  • Lifestyle
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • World

Browse by Tag

Bitcoin Buhari Champions League Discos electricity Explore Bali Golden Globes 2018 Grammy Awards Harbolnas Latest Litecoin Lockdown Market Stories Police Uganda United Stated Word bank

Recent News

Retailer Missguided on brink of calling in administrators – The Guardian

May 28, 2022

How ICF is positioning for IT implementation growth – Washington Technology

May 28, 2022

© 2020 ReyoxNews - No1 Legit News Platform by ReyoxGroup.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home

© 2020 ReyoxNews - No1 Legit News Platform by ReyoxGroup.