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  • #31
    Re: British Nuclear Testing in Australia

    The Plains of Maralinga, sung by.... Alistair Hulett




    ************************************************** ************


    http://links.org.au/node/1484

    Comment


    • #32
      Re: British Nuclear Testing in Australia

      National Archives of Australia

      British nuclear tests at Maralinga – Fact sheet 129
      Between 1952 and 1963 the British Government, with the agreement and support of the Australian Government, carried out nuclear tests at three sites in Australia – the Monte Bello Islands off the Western Australian coast, and at Emu Field and Maralinga in South Australia. An official history of the tests (JL Symonds, A History of British Atomic Tests in Australia, AGPS, Canberra) was published by the Department of Resources and Energy in 1985.

      Maralinga was developed as the permanent proving ground site, following a request of the British in 1954, and, after its completion in 1956, was the location of all trials conducted in Australia. It was developed as a joint facility with a shared funding arrangement. Following the two major trials (Operation Buffalo in 1956 and Operation Antler in 1957) there were a number of minor trials, assessment tests and experimental programs (dating from 1959) held at the range until 1963. Maralinga was officially closed following a clean-up operation (Operation Brumby) in 1967.

      Records relating to Maralinga
      Information about Maralinga is located in records created by a number of Commonwealth agencies. This information covers matters such as personnel who served in the area, security arrangements for the site, and technical and survey information (including meteorological reports).

      full details are at the link>>>>>>>>>>>> http://archweb01.naa.gov.au/collecti...ets/fs129.aspx

      Comment


      • #33
        Re: British Nuclear Testing in Australia


        Maralinga sites need more repair work, files show

        Philip Dorling
        November 12, 2011
        The Age [Australia]





        MORE than a decade after the Howard government declared the clean-up of Maralinga to be finished, the Australian government is continuing to support remediation work at the former British nuclear weapons test site.

        Confidential federal government files released under freedom of information also show Canberra bureaucrats have at times been primarily concerned with ''perceptions'' of radioactive contamination, while rejecting a request by the Maralinga Tjarutja Aboriginal community for a site near the Maralinga village to be cleared of high levels of toxic uranium contamination.

        Files released by the Department of Resources, Energy and Tourism show that erosion of the massive Taranaki burial trench north of Maralinga, described by federal bureaucrats as ''a large radioactive waste repository'', has required significant remediation work. Other burial pits scattered across the former nuclear test range have also been subject to subsidence and erosion, exposing asbestos-contaminated debris.




        While the released documents indicate ''no radiological contamination of groundwater'' has been detected, the federal government has been obliged under its 2009 agreement with Maralinga Tjarutja for the hand-back of the Maralinga test site to initiate a range of further remediation work.

        The Taranaki trench was excavated in the mid-1990s and used to bury radioactive-contaminated debris and soil, principally from numerous ''minor trials'', British nuclear weapons safety and development experiments conducted between 1956 and 1963 that caused the heaviest radioactive contamination at Maralinga.

        Records of a Maralinga Lands and Environmental Management Committee meeting in October last year show that ''erosion of the Taranaki trench was noted'' and that repair work funded by the Commonwealth would be carried out by the Maralinga Tjarutja. An annual survey of 85 debris pits revealed that 19 pits had been subject to erosion or subsidence, with eight requiring ''major work'' and at least four containing exposed asbestos.

        A brief prepared for Resources and Energy Minister Martin Ferguson in April this year questioned the capacity of the Maralinga Tjarutja to manage the former nuclear test site.

        ''We understand that [the Maralinga Tjarutja's] site manager is to be replaced with a community member at the end of June 2011. While it is not for the department to dictate who fills this position, it is necessary that Maralinga Tjarutja appreciates the need for competent management of the site.''

        The released files also show that the Australian government declined requests by Maralinga Tjarutja to clean up the trials site closest to the Maralinga Village.

        Situated east of the Maralinga airstrip, the Kuli site was used by British nuclear weapons scientists to conduct 262 trials that explosively dispersed 7.4 tonnes of uranium into the environment.



        http://www.theage.com.au/national/ma...111-1nbpp.html

        Comment


        • #34
          Re: British Nuclear Testing in Australia

          Paul Langley's Nuclear History Blog
          What was known and when!

          About Paul Langley
          Born July 1953, Havant, England. Arrived Australia 1959. Schools: Primary: Many. Secondary: Urrbrae Agricultural High School. Employment: 70: Southern Farmers. 71-73: Aust. Army: RAEME, Radiac, 4 Base Workshop Bandiana. Seminal moments: Radiac training. French Atmospheric tests. (Unit helped in calibration of fallout detection equipment and fission product identification (Mass Spectrometre). 74- 89 Australian Government. 90 -93 – various. 94-2001 Shelter Worker, Catholic Homeless Shelter.
          2001-05 Admin worker in a University. Quals: Military (Mil, tech) Cert 3 Microcomputer support, Cert 3 Youth Work, alcohol and other Drugs.

          Location: Pt Willunga South Australia

          Written:
          9 ebooks dealing with various aspects of nuclear weapons and their use. (check National Library of Australia catalogue for list)

          Favourite nuclear book:
          American Ground Zero. CAROLE GALLAGHER

          Quite an interesting

          a sample..............................

          A Note from Dennis Hayden
          November 27, 2011
          dennishayden44@tiscali.co.uk

          Our thanks to Paul for posting the full transcript of the 24th November debate in the Scottish Parliament on the Nuclear History blog.

          The UK Ministry of Defence have lost control of the understanding of the science of radiation damage to human health . In recent years they have attempted to excuse excess radiation at nuclear test locations , waste landfill sites and recently at Dalgety Bay in Scotland as due to luminous dials from buried machinery , vehicles and aircraft .

          The fact of the matter is, for the benefit of nuclear industry journalists , government sponsored health protection agencies and epidemiologists, they have been overtaken by an understanding of the science of causation from inhaled and ingested radioactive partcles. When inside the body these act as ‘internal emitters ‘ irradiating tissue , organs and bone from inside the body for the lifetime of the victim .

          The UK , Australian and other nuclear industry protectionist governments are fighting a desperate rearguard action to bury the truth of the science . This is a battle that is currently being lost by them in the UK courts of justice .

          With regards to all

          Dennis Hayden
          for
          The Combined Veterans’ Forum International

          *****************************************

          Scottish Parliament
          Thursday 24 November 2011
          [The Presiding Officer opened the meeting at
          09:15]

          Nuclear Test Veterans
          The Deputy Presiding Officer (Elaine Smith):
          The final item of business is a members’ business
          debate on motion S4M-01242, in the name of
          Christina McKelvie :smile::cool:, on nuclear test veterans. The
          debate will be concluded without any question
          being put. There is a current active case in relation
          to this issue. To avoid straying into matters that
          could be considered sub judice, members are
          advised to avoid making specific references to that
          active case and to issues relating directly to it.
          Motion debated,
          That the Parliament notes that over 20,000 servicemen
          were involved when the United Kingdom carried out nuclear
          weapons tests in the Pacific Ocean and at Maralinga,
          Australia, between 1952 and 1967; further notes that there
          are now only around 1,000 surviving British nuclear
          veterans and 70 in Scotland, including in the Hamilton,
          Larkhall and Stonehouse constituency, and believes that
          society owes a debt to nuclear veterans and that their
          unique service and contribution should be recognised in the
          UK.
          17:10
          Christina McKelvie (Hamilton, Larkhall and
          Stonehouse) (SNP): Usually when we open
          debates, we say that we are delighted to be
          speaking in the debate, but I open this one with a
          heavy heart. I thank and pay tribute to the British
          Nuclear Test Veterans Association for attending
          the debate and bringing this issue not just to my
          attention but to the attention of a number of my
          colleagues across parties and Parliaments.
          [Applause.]

          Here is the link to the blog......peruse it at your leisure..........the content is quite large.


          http://nuclearhistory.wordpress.com/

          Comment


          • #35
            Re: British Nuclear Testing in Australia

            The Passing of Ric Johnstone, President of the Australian Nuclear Veterans Association, Christmas Day, 2011
            LEST WE FORGET.


            email from Major (retired) Alan and Marion Batchelor:

            Dear Friends,

            It is with deep regret that we let you know of the death of Ric Johnstone (President of ANVA), yesterday afternoon Christmas day, at the Tarragal House Nursing Home, Erina.

            No other details are known at this stage pending the arrival of his son, Ron, from Queensland.

            Kind regards,

            Alan and Marion Batchelor.

            end quote.



            Ric presented the case for nuclear veterans and victims without fear and with endless energy and great emotional and rational investment.

            Though he was one of the very few veterans in Australia to attain some justice through successful action, he did not rest upon his own favour. Rather, he invested his life to the welfare of others, increasingly widows of veterans and their children. He never ceased explaining the case for the veterans and the case against the authorities.

            Though Australia is a large country, with veterans thinly spread far and wide, and possessing diverse views, all will miss Ric badly for his total dedication to the cause. A cause made more urgent by the day.

            Until nuclear veterans are fully acknowledged, the decisions of government will be made upon a false premise.

            The nuclear tests constituted hazardous war-like duty, in which personnel prepared for and trained within a nuclear battlefield.

            Ric entered hot zones shortly after bomb detonations, to recover target response vehicles. His duties included steamcleaning of contaminated vehicles, and for many years was the sole survivor of his squad. The direct memory of the futility of steam cleaning vehicles – forcing hot particles deeper into cracks, creases and crevices of vehicles and machines, some of which were later sold to the general public, remained with him. It was one of the many subjects he discussed with me.

            A person of deep conviction, he was fearless in his expression of his views. Though rendered a civilian by nuclear service induced illness, he conducted himself over many years with the bearing any serving soldier would be expected to display. This standard of discipline marks both the standard of the Association he headed and the policies it pursued in the fight for justice.

            His public statements were clear and informed. Though in contest with authorities, his statements always conveyed respect for elected leadership. This, even though many politiicians, who thought they knew it all, did not and do not behave with the same military standard bearing Ric held has a personal and intrinsic trait. His contempt for the the suppression of truth was long standing.

            I am greatly saddened. Ric and I assisted the Indigenous Section of the South Australian Museum mount a Maralinga nuclear test display a few years ago. Apart from phone calls and emails, this was the first and only time I met him. His knowledge, humour, resources and networks enabled the display to be a memorable and important event which helped inform a younger generation of South Australians of their real history. It helped Australia’s nuclear victims validate their varied experiences and memories. Something authorities would rather not occur. As a result of that Museum display, Ric was invited to a radio interview at the ABC. At the last moment he told me I was participating as well. He insisted. I will transcribe the recording of that interview as soon as I can. It is his words, his record, his memories forged through his witness and insight which are important. And will remain forever important.

            I will miss you Ric and so will everyone else. We will carry on.

            Ric suffered at the time of the tests – abnormal blood changes, vomitting and so on. He then suffered heart disease which required the insertion of stents in the arteries of his heart. These stents eroded abnormally rapidly, surprising his doctors with the unusual reaction of his immune system. In an attempt to lengthen the life of the stents, eventually stents coated with medical radioistopes were inserted. Amazing the doctors, these stents were rapidly and severely attacked by his immune system, in complete contradiction to their expectations. Like many, many nuclear veterans, Ric suffered from the time of his nuclear service until the time of his death.

            Ric’s service at Maralinga in the 1950s changed his life. He made the best of the situation of injustice he found himself in.
            Though acknowledging the lies told over decades by nuclear authorities and elected politicians, Ric remained convinced that oil wars and other resource wars were a major threat – threats any service person or veteran would be well aware of. Service personnel have a life and death interest in trends which cause war. And Ric’s views, as he and I discussed them and exchanged views, were deeply rooted in the hope for a peaceful future.

            Ric hoped for a safe nuclear industry and shared the common sense view that nuclear veterans suffered the fission gamma and neutron bomb bursts as well as fallout. Forced to live in canvas tents in harsh conditions, Ric and his cohort at Maralinga watched the English leadership have their air conditioned caravans washed down daily. The troops might bang the top of their tents to raise a cloud of Maralinga dust from the canvas. It’s all very well for the leadership to claim that they “were hale and hearty” after the bombings of Australia. It’s certainly not true of the veterans and affected civilians.

            We have lost a fearless fighter for the truth and rights of the victims of the British nuclear bombing of Australia. A fighter who helped many. The help came in many forms, and came no matter what.

            Ric’s contribution to the Howard Government’s Atomic Test Health Survey Consultative Forum was tireless, and though unhappy with many aspects, presented his views aiming for the best possible outcome possible. Alan Batchelor and others continues the fight to correct the errors in the official view which came from the snowball tossed into the proceedings by government agents.

            The primary complaint being the lack of accurate dosimetry and the official ignorance of the internal contamination of veterans. Particularly from plutonium and other substances from the so called minor trials in which disarmed nuclear weapons were cooked, smashed into concrete walls in speeding railway train carriages, and blown up with TNT. These activities spread plutonium over wide areas both inside and outside the designated nuclear test areas. The resultant bomb Britain produced, the Blue Danube was obselete and out of service by the early 1960s. A lot of suffering caused for little effect. An arrogant effort to duplicate already existing weaponry. Had the USSR done to Maralinga, Emu Field and Monte Bello what the British and Australian governments did, it would have started a war and the victims would have been hailed heroes instead of being denied, hidden, given false diagnosis, suffer the “loss” of their film badges and medical records and labelled subversive and threatened, at one stage, with penalties for speaking. Ric always had a lot on his plate, as do all nuclear veterans and their families.

            Ric’s gone Home, and he has been welcomed by his mates who have been waiting for him for many earthly decades in that better place.

            Bye mate.

            I would ask the Australian Government again: release the Maralinga hospital records in full to the families affected. Release the data in name redacted form to the people of Australia, the people who have a right to know and the people who elected you and pay you to do your duty. The Maralinga Hospital records are not lost as the government claims. They are hidden.

            Ric did his duty for free. And it was a duty which came with a cost. His was a long and courageous march toward the objectives of justice and truth. He will not be forgotten.

            Paul Langley



            ****************************************

            More at the link.................. Paul Langley's Nuclear History Blog
            What was known and when.


            http://nuclearhistory.wordpress.com/...tmas-day-2011/

            Comment


            • #36
              Re: British Nuclear Testing in Australia


              Nuclear survivor fought to the end February 25, 2012.



              Between 1952 and 1963, the British government conducted nuclear atomic tests in Australia, at Monte Bello off the coast of Western Australia and in South Australian desert at Maralinga and Emu Field.

              In 1956, Ric Johnstone was 22 and a young serviceman when he was sent to Maralinga on a ''secret'' assignment as a motor mechanic. Soon he was decontaminating and assessing vehicles in the ''hot'' area after they had been used in atomic detonations. Johnstone was discharged from the RAAF, on medical grounds, in December 1957.

              In the months after leaving Maralinga, he had been treated in an RAAF hospital for radiation sickness and in a repatriation hospital for an anxiety state. He married his wife, Shirley, in 1956. He and many other servicemen endured many cancers.




              The claim for damages or compensation for cancer has been a continuing struggle over the years since.

              Johnstone sued the Commonwealth of Australia in the Supreme Court of NSW for the psychological effects of his service and in 1988 a jury awarded him a significant amount for damages. The case was a landmark as Johnstone is so far the only veteran at the nuclear tests to have won a claim for negligence against the Commonwealth for injuries suffered during those tests.

              Daryl Richard Johnstone was born on November 30, 1933, in Carlton, Victoria, to Richard Johnstone, a merchant seaman, and his wife, Sylvia (nee Handley). After the collapse of the marriage, Richard took his two children to Redcliffe in Western Australia. Ric went to East Perth State School. He spent some years as a jackaroo in the Kimberley, training as a motor mechanic.

              In 1949, he joined the British and Australian merchant marine and in 1953, after serving four of the five years required for his national service in the 16th Infantry Battalion in Western Australia, he was asked to join the RAAF Combined Service Task Force because motor mechanics were needed.

              The Australian Nuclear Veterans Association (ANVA) came into being in the early 1970s. At first, it was men who met socially to talk about serving at Maralinga. Because of his own legal case and because of the community work he was doing organising self-help groups for people suffering from anxiety, phobias and stress disorders, articles about Johnstone appeared in the media and this prompted some of his former Camp 43 colleagues to make contact with him.




              As time went by, the men began to realise that many of the health problems they had suffered could probably be traced to Maralinga and they conceived the idea of forming an association of nuclear veterans. By the late 1970s, there were regular meetings and veterans agreed ANVA should be open to anyone who had served at any of the three nuclear test locations in Australia. Membership grew rapidly.

              In March 1983, the government changed and, in 1984 and 1985, ANVA represented the main group of veterans at the Royal Commission into British Nuclear Tests in Australia.

              Johnstone didn't attend the commission because of his agoraphobia but as president of ANVA, he continued the fight for recognition and compensation. The media often turned to him when the plight of the veterans was topical. When the Howard government received the recommendations of the 2003 Clarke Review of Veterans' Entitlements, it did little and, in 2008, the Labor government conducted its own review of the recommendations, again inviting veterans to make submissions.

              The Veterans' Entitlement Act was amended but for the veterans the results were disappointing and frustratingly slow. Johnstone received a Veterans' Gold Card for his own injuries only months before he died.

              Recently, Johnstone gave instructions to an Australian law firm to try to unite the Australian veterans in a class action by British veterans against the British Ministry of Defence. In July 2010, the British veterans were successful in persuading the court that they should be allowed to pursue their cases but in November last year, the Court of Appeal of England and Wales overturned the decision.

              Ric Johnstone, who died of cancer, is survived by his sons, Daryl and Ronald, and his partner, Carmen Sofia.

              Daniel Brezniak



              Read more: http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/nati...#ixzz1nMBss380

              Comment


              • #37
                Re: British Nuclear Testing in Australia

                :angry: Veterans lose nuclear damages bid :angry:

                March 15, 2012 5:47AM "Adelaide Now"


                BRITISH ex-servicemen who say they became ill from 1950s nuclear weapon tests have lost their latest legal battle.

                But lawyers and relatives said the fight would go on and urged ministers to set up a compensation scheme.

                More than 1000 veterans want compensation and have been battling for permission to launch damages claims for more than two years, claiming they became sick after being exposed to radiation during nuclear weapons testing in Australia, Christmas Island and the Pacific.

                The Ministry of Defence (MoD) is contesting veterans' complaints and denies negligence.

                Veterans say they were exposed to fallout radiation from tests and say that exposure caused illness, disability or death. The MoD denies both "exposure" and "causation".

                The Supreme Court, the UK's highest court, yesterday ruled in the MoD's favour after the latest round of litigation and said the majority of claims could not proceed.

                A panel of seven Supreme Court justices had analysed evidence at a hearing in London in November and ruled against veterans by a 4-3 majority.

                Judges expressed sympathy but concluded that veterans lacked evidence to prove links between illness and proximity to tests and said many claims had been made too late.

                Lawyers are studying the ruling and trying to calculate how many claims will be able to proceed.

                Veterans' relatives said they were disappointed by the ruling and called on ministers to step in.

                "The government wouldn't lose one vote by compensating the British nuclear test veterans - in fact they'd win a lot," said Rose Clark, 71, of Romford, east London, whose husband Michael - a former soldier - died in 1992 aged 51 after contracting cancer.

                "This is not really about money - it's about the Government acknowledging that these young men were put at risk."

                "My husband was on Christmas Island and witnessed five tests. He used to say he was so close he could see the skeletons of the people standing on the beach. He was 19 then.

                "We didn't think about it. But now I have no doubt now that his cancer was caused by what he was exposed to," she said.

                Veterans' lawyer Neil Sampson said Britain should follow the lead of other countries and set up a "fair and just" compensation scheme.

                "The approach that this government takes is to waste resources on fighting veterans rather than co-operating with them," he said.

                "There are some things in life that are wrong. The approach of the Government to this issue is one of those things."

                The MoD issued a statement in which a spokesman said: "The Ministry of Defence recognises the debt of gratitude we have to the servicemen who took part in the nuclear tests.

                "They were important tests that helped to keep this nation secure at a difficult time in terms of nuclear technology.

                "The Supreme Court ruled today in favour of the MoD that the claims brought by Nuclear Test Veterans were time barred and declined to allow the claims to proceed under the statutory discretion.

                "Perhaps of greater significance is that all the justices recognised that the veterans would face great difficulty proving a causal link between illnesses suffered and attendance at the tests.

                "The Supreme Court described the claims as having no reasonable prospect of success and that they were doomed to fail."

                He added: "Where individual veterans are able to produce reliable evidence to raise a reasonable doubt that their illness is related to their service, they may be entitled to a War Pension."

                Lord Wilson, one of the Supreme Court justices who today ruled in the MoD's favour, said veterans had lost by the "narrowest possible margin".

                He told the Supreme Court hearing: "Putting the law aside for one moment, all seven members of the court would wish to record their personal sympathy for the veterans."


                Once again a typical decision............ 'All Care but NO RESPONSIBILITY


                http://www.adelaidenow.com.au/news/w...-1226299914400

                Comment


                • #38
                  Re: British Nuclear Testing in Australia

                  More general information.

                  The Maralinga atomic tests veterans – further law cases to come
                  Nuclear test locations in the Pacific and Australia are similar to fall out ‘ exclusion zones’ at Chernobyl , Fukushima and other nuclear reactor accident locations , the truth of the science indicates this and if that is anti – nuclear there isn’t much we can do about it . At nuclear test locations the servicemen deliberately had no protective clothing or respirators, the scientists controlling and monitoring the experiments however did .Inside the exclusion zones around crippled reactors of nuclear accidents such as Fukushima all those working there are fully protected with respirators etc and rightly so .

                  Our guess is the Government will continue to use legal delaying tactics to prevent the truth of the science of causation being fully debated in an open court

                  A Message from the Nuclear Veterans, Paul Langley’s Nuclear History Blog, Dennis Hayden, 5 April 12, THE DUST HAS SETTLED FOLLOWING THE SUPREME COURT DECISION THE UK CASE IS STILL ON GOING & UK MINISTERS’ JOY WILL BE SHORT LIVED ”…… the Government and nuclear industry will do everything in their power to keep the UK Atomic Veterans Claimants case from a full court hearing on causation . The pro or anti nuclear issue is somewhat
                  irrelevant because the truth of the science is the only arbiter on
                  facts of radiation damage to health . Fall out ingested / inhaled
                  alpha and beta particles into the body causes long term health
                  problems . Fall out radiation is totally ignored by the political /
                  science establishment of all nuclear weapons powers , nuclear reactor
                  users and uranium mining nations and is referred to by the euphemism
                  “low dose” radiation .

                  Nuclear test locations in the Pacific and Australia are similar to fall out ‘ exclusion zones’ at Chernobyl , Fukushima and other nuclear reactor accident locations , the truth of the science indicates this and if that is anti – nuclear there isn’t much we can do about it . At nuclear test locations the servicemen deliberately had no protective clothing or respirators, the scientists controlling and monitoring the experiments however did .Inside the exclusion zones around crippled reactors of nuclear accidents such as Fukushima all those working there are fully protected with respirators etc and rightly so .

                  Our guess is the Government will continue to use legal delaying tactics to prevent the truth of the science of causation being fully debated in an open court and , if faced with the situation where they
                  are unable to do this, they will perhaps , as a very last resort ,
                  kick the truth of ingested low level alpha and beta fall out into the
                  long grass by an out of court settlement before then . We believe this
                  is the only defence they have to prevent the truth entering the public
                  domain ….
                  the case is still on going and causation is yet to be fully debated .

                  The point the politicians fail to take into account is that our case is still live and on going .We have one case still proceeding to High Court another 1002 not yet statute barred and hearing before a Judge of almost 20 pension appeal cases . Therefore , it will not be
                  Ministers such as Andrew Robathan MP , who have the last word in
                  future litigation but the Judges .
                  http://nuclearhistory.wordpress.com/...lear-veterans/

                  There is more reading of interest @ the link http://antinuclear.net/2012/04/05/th...cases-to-come/

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Re: British Nuclear Testing in Australia

                    Well at long last this looks like the end of an epic and drawn out scenario----------- GOVERNMENTS WIN........VETERANS LOSE.

                    *******************************************

                    STACKS/GOUDKAMP
                    THE LAW FIRM
                    83 King Street
                    Newcastle NSW 2300
                    PO Box 438
                    Newcastle NSW 2300
                    DX 7857 Newcastle NSW
                    T 0249253355
                    OUR REFERENCE: TJG/RH/MG 90527 p 0249253366
                    stacksgoudkamp.com.au
                    16 May 2012
                    Dear--------

                    RE: Class Action for Nuclear Veterans
                    As you are aware we have been closely following the case of the British nuclear
                    veterans in the UK, as our case is almost identical to theirs. In our last update we
                    informed you that the UK Supreme Court (formerly the House of Lords) heard the
                    British veterans' appeal to allow the case to go forward. On 14 March 2012 the
                    Supreme Court published their decision. The Court decided 4 to 3 that the
                    Veterans were out of time and could not proceed with their case as it stands.
                    It may be helpful to review the history of our case and its link to the British nuclear
                    veterans' case. In December 2004 a large number of British Nuclear Veterans
                    filed a group action claim against the British Ministry of Defence. They claimed
                    compensation for illnesses suffered as a result of their exposure to radiation
                    during the British Nuclear Testing in Australia

                    The UK High Court Decision
                    The limitation period for a compensation claim such as this is three years. The
                    Ministry of Defence said the veterans were way out of time and therefore could
                    not make a claim. The veterans argued that many of them were not aware of the
                    link between their illnesses and their nuclear testing experience. A High Court
                    judge heard these arguments about the limitation period in eariy 2009.
                    In June 2009 the judge, in a very lengthy and detailed judgment, stated that he
                    believed many of the veterans did not know in a legal sense about the link
                    between their illnesses and the nuclear testing and therefore were not out of time.
                    The judge also stated that many veterans would have known about the link but he
                    used his discretion to allow their cases to go ahead anyway.
                    Stacks/Goudkamp Prepares to Launch Action
                    A number of Australian nuclear veterans heard about the UK decision. They were
                    aware that attempts to obtain compensation for them in Australia had not been
                    successful. The decision in the UK case provided some hope to the veterans and
                    Stacks/Goudkamp was contacted to see if we could assist.



                    2

                    We read through the High Court Judge's decision and consulted with a number of
                    experienced Barristers. If the judge's decision were upheld then we believed the
                    Australian nuclear veterans would also be able to start a case or possibly join the
                    British Veterans' group action. With the help of a number of nuclear veterans'
                    associations, we started to put the word out and started collecting information
                    from interested nuclear veterans and their families. We notified the solicitors for
                    the British government that we intended to file a claim.
                    We have known from the beginning that the case was very difficult and would
                    present enormous challenges. We believed that as long as the High Court's
                    decision stood we had a good chance of joining forces with the British, New
                    Zealand and Fijian veterans and put a case forward.

                    UK Court of Appeal Decision
                    Of course, the Ministry of Defence appealed the decision of the High Court judge.
                    They continued to argue that the veterans were out of time. They further argued
                    that the veterans did not have the scientific evidence to positively link their health
                    problems with radiation exposure.
                    In May 2010 the Court of Appeal heard the case. They did not provide their
                    decision until November 2010. The Court of Appeal unanimously decided that the
                    veterans were out of time and could not continue with their case. They decided
                    that the veterans were aware of any potential links between their health problems
                    and nuclear testing for quite some time. The Court of Appeal judgment also said
                    that it would be extremely difficult for the veterans to scientifically prove their
                    case.
                    The solicitors for the British veterans appealed the Court of Appeal's decision to
                    the UK Supreme Court, the highest court in the UK.

                    Changes to Australia's Veterans Entitlement Act
                    In June 2010 the government presented their upcoming budget, which included
                    changes to the Veterans Entitlement Act supposedly making it easier for veterans
                    of the nuclear testing to apply for pensions and health cards. Following
                    recommendations from the Clarke Review done back in 2003, the government
                    made British Nuclear Test Veterans a specific category and lowered the threshold
                    for entitlements to the reasonable hypothesis standard of proof.
                    Stacks/Goudkamp reviewed the changes in the Veterans Entitlement Act and
                    although we remained sceptical of its impact, we encouraged all veterans on our
                    list, who were not already in receipt of benefits, to apply or reapply under the
                    changes. Many of those that did apply reported back to us that they were still
                    knocked back because, even with the standard reduced, the government refused
                    to admit that anyone involved in the tests was exposed to any more radiation than
                    the average person.

                    3
                    UK Supreme Court Decision
                    In July 2011 the UK Supreme Court agreed to hear the appeal of the British
                    veterans. The appeal was heard in November 2011. On 14 March 2012 the seven judges finally released their decision and unfortunately it was devastating news
                    for British Nuclear Test veterans. The majority of the judges decided that the
                    veterans were out of time to file a claim against the Ministry of Defence.

                    The majority of Supreme Court judges believed that the veterans had made the
                    link between their health problems and the nuclear testing many years ago. The
                    fact that nuclear test veterans associations were formed long before any action
                    was taken in the courts was cited as evidence that the veterans believed that their
                    nuclear test experience led to health problems.
                    Perhaps even more discouraging was the fact that all the judges, even the three
                    dissenting judges, stated that they did not believe the veterans could successfully
                    prove their case on the evidence now available.

                    What Does This Mean?
                    We have thoroughly reviewed the Supreme Court's decision. We are of the
                    opinion that the decision makes it impossible for almost everyone on our list to
                    make a claim that would be considered within the required time limits.
                    One of the promising things from the original UK High Court decision made back
                    in June 2009 was the judge's decision that it was not possible for the veterans to
                    make a connection between their health problems and the nuclear tests without
                    having some scientific evidence to support it. He believed it was not enough for
                    the veterans to suspect that was the case, they needed something more
                    substantial. The Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court disagreed and said time
                    started when the veteran made that connection. The veteran did not need any
                    specific evidence.
                    We have spoken by telephone to more than 300 people on our list. During these
                    discussions almost all have stated that they long believed that their experience or
                    their husbands' or fathers' experience at the nuclear testing was responsible for
                    many of their health problems. In every case, this link was made more than three
                    years prior to the launching of our action in early 2010.


                    The UK Courts were also of the opinion that even if the case had been allowed to
                    move forward, there was just not enough evidence to convince a court that there
                    was a direct link between the testing and the veterans' health problems.
                    It is important to note that the High Court of Australia takes an even tougher stand
                    on the limitation period than the UK Courts. That is why we have not considered
                    pursuing the case in Australia.
                    Given the decision of the UK Courts, Stacks/Goudkamp is of the opinion that the
                    proposed class action against the UK Ministry of Defence does not have
                    reasonable prospects of success and we are unable to pursue the matter further.
                    This decision was not made lightly. We looked at every potential way around the
                    Supreme Court's decision but currently cannot see how we would be able to
                    mount a case without running into the same problem again.

                    4



                    We are of the opinion that nuclear veterans and others affected by the British
                    Nuclear testing have not been well served by the Australian and British
                    governments. Every country that has conducted above ground nuclear testing
                    (USA, Russia. China, France), other than Great Britain, has acknowledged that
                    their veterans, public servants and even civilians may have been affected by the
                    testing and have provided some form of compensation.
                    Australia allowed the British to detonate and test all sorts of nuclear weapons on
                    its soil. This testing went on well into the 1960s. It is shameful that the Australian
                    government does not acknowledge the potential harm this may have caused.
                    Although we are unable to pursue this matter in the courts, we will continue to
                    advocate that the Australian government recognise and acknowledge the
                    negative impact of the British testing and find some way to adequately
                    compensate and/or support those that have been affected. We appreciate a!! the
                    support and information that you provided.

                    Yours faithfully,
                    Tom Goudkamp
                    MANAGING DIRECTOR


                    *****************************

                    And here Endeth the Message.

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Re: British Nuclear Testing in Australia

                      Thank you Gordon, for keeping us informed with the reality of potential claims for health damage due to radiation.

                      It is a pity that the staff of government departments who authorise such testing, do not join those who have no right to say NO.

                      A sad situation, but is not the only situation, from which governments have not accepted any liability.

                      I wonder if the lawyers could publish all the names of goverment personnel, who suggested and/or authorised such testing? It might make those in power today and in the future, think twice ?

                      Regards

                      Ranald

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Re: British Nuclear Testing in Australia

                        Originally posted by Ranald View Post
                        It is a pity that the staff of government departments who authorise such testing, do not join those who have no right to say NO.

                        A sad situation, but is not the only situation, from which governments have not accepted any liability.

                        I wonder if the lawyers could publish all the names of goverment personnel, who suggested and/or authorised such testing? It might make those in power today and in the future, think twice ?

                        Regards

                        Ranald
                        One has to wonder if there is a democracy there anymore where civil servants and elected officials lack accountability for their actions. It appears that the pendulum has swung backwards 500 years for the average individual. No protection from harmful decisions.

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          Re: British Nuclear Testing in Australia

                          18th August 2012.


                          Dear XXXXXXX
                          RE: Class Action for Nuclear Veterans
                          In our letter to you'of 16 May 2012" we; informedyou that"the recent decision of the UK Supreme Court had effectively put a stop to our hopes of filing a case on behalf of Australian veterans affected by the British nuclear testing.
                          Since then we have been investigating other possibilities to highlight the plight of nuclear test participants and their families. Although taking action in the courts no longer appears possible, we still wanted to see if something could be done to put pressure on the Commonwealth government to do something more for you.
                          Stacks/Goudkamp believes that it may be possible to make a complaint to the Australian Human Rights Commission (HRC). The HRC's role is not to make a decision about your complaint but it tries to get all sides together to discuss potential solutions to the complaint. Although it is unlikely to result in the Commonwealth agreeing to provide compensation, it will at least result in more attention being drawn to your matter and may lead to some form of recognition of the dangers faced by test participants.
                          We are considering making a complaint to the HRC on behalf of everyone on our list. To do this we need your authority. It will not cost you anything to participate. However, it is also unlikely that you will receive any compensation even if the HRC agrees to investigate the matter. We are doing this primarily in an attempt to obtain more recognition for you and maybe motivate the government to reconsider extending veteran entitlements or other Commonwealth benefits to nuclear test participants

                          Our experience with those on our list has been that almost everyone is interested in doing what is necessary to promote the cause of nuclear test veterans. Therefore rather than get each person on our list to grant authority, we will proceed on your behalf unless we receive specific instructions from you NOT to participate in a complaint to the Human Rights Commission within 30 days from the date of this letter. If you agree to participate, you do not have to respond.
                          If you provide us with notice that you have decided not to participate, then we will remove your name from our list and you will not receive anything further from us. If you agree to participate, we will provide you with updates on the progress of the matter with the HRC.
                          Tom Goudkamp MANAGING DIRECTOR
                          SYDNEY NEWCASTLE
                          Liability limited by a scheme approved under Professional Standards Legislation STACKS/GOUDKAMP P/L ABN 88 104 796 394
                          Regardless of your decision, we thank you for your contribution and patience in this matter. Yours faithfully,
                          Last edited by 1938 Observer; 12 September 2012, 23:23. Reason: text amendment

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            Re: British Nuclear Testing in Australia

                            This will probably be the 'Last Hurrah" as all other attempts to obtain recognition have failed, Governments seem to have a bottomless pit of funds to defend these claims.

                            ********************************************


                            Maralinga veterans in last-ditch bid for compensation
                            PM By Rebecca Brice
                            ABC News..Australia.

                            [B]Almost 300 Australian veterans of British nuclear testing are making a last-ditch attempt to win compensation.

                            They want the Human Rights Commission to find that the Australian Government knowingly exposed them to harmful radiation by ordering them to take part in the tests in the SA outback.

                            While any recommendation from that action will not be binding, they are hoping to embarrass the Government into compensating them and providing medical treatment.

                            Many of the surviving personnel, ordered to take part in the tests at Maralinga in the 1950s and '60s, blame their medical conditions on exposure to nuclear radiation.

                            Stacks Goudkamp lawyer Joshua Dale says given the advanced age of the group, it is very much a case of now or never.

                            "This submission is really the end of the line," he said.

                            "It's the last opportunity that we have to try and get some kind of recourse from the Australian Government.


                            Audio: Veterans final bid for radiation compensation (PM)
                            "It essentially says that the Australian governments have breached the human rights of the veterans and this is for a number of reasons.

                            "The nuclear veterans were essentially used as guinea pigs during the nuclear testing.

                            "There's evidence that has revealed that the veterans were sent in after testing had taken place to see what the type of effect radiation would have on the human body, and there's various articles under the universal declaration that specifically go to a right to life and obviously the right to a standard of living as well."

                            The veterans' decision to take their case to the Human Rights Commission follows a UK court's ruling that the link between the tests and the veterans' health problems could not be proven.

                            In 2010 the Government allocated $24 million towards service pensions and healthcare cards for the veterans and their widows.

                            Entitlements disputes

                            Video: Maralinga veterans appeal to HRC for justice (7pm TV News NSW)

                            A spokeswoman for Veterans Affairs Minister Warren Snowdon says eligible veterans have access to a broad range of compensation and health treatment already.

                            But Mr Dale says many are caught up in disputes over the entitlements.

                            "The problem is these administrative disputes are largely being viciously defended by the Government," he said.

                            "In a lot of the cases they're unsuccessful because of the time that has lapsed and due to the secrecy of the type of testing that was taking place.

                            We were never given any briefing as to what we were doing, what the dangers were, what risks were involved or what precautions had to be taken.
                            Avon Hudson, veteran Australian service personnel
                            "A lot of the records don't even show what type of levels of radiation they were exposed to, which means there's very little evidence to prove that they were exposed to harmful levels and whether or not those levels could have potentially caused their illnesses.

                            "One of the veterans that we represent, he suffers from leukaemia, and they've said that he was too far away from the testing to be exposed to dangerous levels of radiation.

                            "He's really left high and dry at the moment with this horrific illness."

                            Avon Hudson, 76, is one of 8,000 Australian service personnel that took part in the tests.

                            He has echoed Mr Dale's sentiments on how urgent the case is.

                            "If we don't get what we're entitled to now, well I suppose all we can do is throw our hands in the air and wait for the end to come, because we're all getting too old," Mr Hudson said.

                            "We won't be here in five years.

                            "Every year that goes by it's less likely you'll be able to cope with these things.

                            "We were never given any briefing as to what we were doing, what the dangers were, what risks were involved or what precautions had to be taken..




                            Go to the link below to view videos or listen to audio.


                            http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-02-2...-compo/4532954

                            Comment


                            • #44
                              Re: British Nuclear Testing in Australia

                              Maralinga nuclear tests case rejected by Human Rights Commission

                              Commission says it does not have jurisdiction to hear case of veterans exposed to radiation from British nuclear testing

                              Tuesday 10 December 2013 17.22 AEST The Guardian.


                              [B]Australian veterans deliberately exposed to British nuclear bomb testing have had their case rejected by Australia's Human Rights Commission, which says it does not have the jurisdiction to hear their complaint.

                              The ruling was the last legal avenue available to the surviving 300 veterans, who argued the Menzies government violated their human rights under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights by exposing them to harmful radiation from nuclear tests in the 1950s and 1960s at Maralinga, South Australia.

                              “This decision marks the end of the road for our nuclear veterans, and I would say that the only recourse they have available to them now is a plea for an act of grace by the Australian government to take responsibility for the events involving nuclear testing on Australian soil,” said Joshua Dale, a human rights law specialist from the law firm Stacks/Goudkamp, which represented the veterans.

                              He said the decision was a failure to recognise the rights of military veterans.

                              “Sir Robert Menzies proclaimed Australia’s signature on the declaration indicated to the world that ‘we stand for justice’. He then allowed the British to conduct nuclear tests on Australian soil. The nuclear veterans have been denied justice, they have been denied rights to compensation, and ultimately they have been deprived of their dignity and recognition by the government who wronged them,” he said.


                              The president of the Australian Human Rights Commission, Gillian Triggs, wrote in her decision: “I am of the opinion that the commission does not have jurisdiction to enquire into alleged acts or practices that occurred during the period 1952 to 1963, whether under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights or under any international human rights instrument scheduled to or declared for the purposes of the Australian Human Rights Commission Act.”




                              Veterans who were present at the nuclear testing at Maralinga have higher rates of cancer than the general population. The tests led to widespread contamination of the surrounding land.

                              Australian serviceman, as well as Indigenous people who lived near the test sites, have been pressing the UK and Australian governments for compensation for their injuries. The British supreme court found in 2012 that 1,000 British veterans who joined together to make a claim could not succeed because too much time had passed since the tests.

                              Dale has called on the government to examine veterans’ affairs legislation and allow the serviceman to be able to gain compensation.

                              “What needs to happen now is that a genuine discussion be had between all members of parliament to address the inadequacies that exist in relation to veterans’ affairs legislation directly affecting the nuclear veterans.

                              “These men deserve the peace of mind to know that the government that wronged them will now finally look after them.”

                              http://www.theguardian.com/world/201...hts-commission

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                Re: British Nuclear Testing in Australia


                                Blow for nuclear veterans as Human Rights Commission rejects complaint






                                Australian servicemen deliberately exposed to nuclear bomb testing at Maralinga have been dealt a final blow in their long fight for justice.

                                The survivors of those who worked in the radiation were told on Tuesday the Australian Human Rights Commission would not hear their claim that the Menzies government breached their human rights by using them as virtual guinea pigs in the tests conducted by the British at Maralinga, Emu Field and Monte Bello Islands in the 1950s and '60s.

                                This was the last possible legal avenue they could have pursued in Australia.


                                Alan Batchelor in 1957. Photo: Supplied
                                Independent senator Nick Xenophon said he would introduce amendments to allow Australian veterans of the British nuclear testing to receive assistance. "These Australian veterans were treated as human guinea pigs by the British government," he said.

                                Advertisement The commission rejected the complaint alleging a breach of human rights, saying what happened to the servicemen at the nuclear tests was outside its jurisdiction.

                                Joshua Dale, a human rights law specialist at Stacks/Goudkamp in Sydney, said the decision marked a sad day for human rights in Australia. ''This decision marks the end of the road for our nuclear veterans and I would say that the only recourse they have … now is a plea for an act of grace by the Australian government to take responsibility for the events involving nuclear testing on Australian soil.''




                                Canberra resident Alan Batchelor, who spent six months at Maralinga during the testing, called for a change to the legislation that prevented the commission from hearing the claim. "I think the whole thing is a political cover-up,'' he said.

                                ''The reason for this is that Australia was used as a laboratory during the tests. They collected bones from dead people and assessed the amount of strontium 90 that was in the bones. However the legislation that exists at the moment prevents any real investigation.''

                                Mr Batchelor was second in charge of a group of 68 engineers at Maralinga in South Australia. They were sent to recover instruments from a shelter about 50 metres from the blast site, just out of reach of the fireball.

                                "They wanted immediate readings and I, with about six engineers and scientists, went there within an hour of the bomb exploding,'' he said.

                                "Now there are only a few of these engineers left, I know of only two others, out of the total of 68.''

                                A 2006 report commissioned by the Australian government showed those working at the Maralinga and Emu Field testing sites were 23 per cent more likely to develop cancer, and 18 per cent more likely to die from cancer, than the general population. However, in a blow to the men's claims for compensation, it concluded it was impossible to say whether that was due to the men's exposure to radiation. Before his posting to Maralinga, Mr Batchelor and his wife had a healthy child. A year after he returned, his wife miscarried a badly deformed foetus, his submission to the commission states. He has since developed myasthenia gravis, an auto-immune disorder.



                                Read more: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/act-...#ixzz2plueySeF

                                .................................................. .................................................. .................................................. .......................

                                Just to refresh memories, this is an interesting scenario...............


                                Did fallout from nuclear testing contaminate Australia's milk supply? From 1957 to 1978, scientists secretly removed bone samples from over 21,000 dead Australians as they searched for evidence of the deadly poison, Strontium 90 - a by-product of nuclear testing. Silent Storm reveals the story behind this astonishing case of officially sanctioned 'body-snatching'. Set against a backdrop of the Cold War, the saga follows celebrated scientist, Hedley Marston, as he attempts to blow the whistle on radioactive contamination and challenge official claims that British atomic tests posed no threat to the Australian people. Marston's findings are not only disputed, he is targeted as 'a scientist of counter-espionage interest'. Now, questions are being raised about the health repercussions for generations of Australians.




                                Silent Storm (Documentary) - 1 of 5 .


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