
	
	Global Research
	
	January 21, 2009
	AFP
	
	from
	
	GlobalResearch Website
	
	
	VIENNA
	
	The UN nuclear watchdog said on Wednesday it would investigate 
	allegations by Arab countries that Israel may have used ammunition 
	containing depleted uranium during its 22-day military offensive in Gaza.
	
	The countries made the allegations in a letter addressed to Director General 
	Mohammed ElBaradei and delivered by the Saudi Arabian ambassador on Monday.
	They asked the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to investigate the matter.
	
	IAEA spokeswoman Melissa Fleming confirmed the receipt of the letter.
	
		
		"We are circulating the letter to member states and will investigate the 
	matter to the extent of our ability," IAEA spokeswoman Melissa Fleming said.
	
	
	The exact course of action would be decided after consultation with member 
	states.
	
	The Israeli ambassador to the IAEA, Israel Michaeli, declined to comment.
	
	Depleted uranium is a waste product of uranium enrichment and has a number 
	of civilian and military applications, including its use in weapons to 
	penetrate tanks and amour plating.
	
	Investigations have been carried out into its use in ammunition in conflicts 
	such as the 1991 Gulf War and 1994-95 NATO air strikes in the Balkans.
	
	The IAEA published a report on the issue in 2002. At the time, IAEA Deputy 
	Director General Werner Burkart said: 
	
		
		"To be honest, there are very few 
	health concerns for depleted uranium from a radiological point of view, 
	because it is only very slightly radioactive.
"Even the handling of enriched uranium in industry does not need special 
	protection such as shielding. There are more dangerous radiotoxic elements 
	associated with uranium in nature."
	
	
	Depleted uranium could pose a health risk, however, in the form of dust 
	found at impact sites.
	
	Nevertheless, in the case of the Balkans conflict, 
	
		
		"it is difficult to 
	imagine that peacekeepers had exposure to depleted uranium high enough to 
	significantly change their normal level of radiation exposure from natural 
	and civilian sources," Burkart said at the time.
	
	
	
	
	 
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	Before leaving office, Bush approved new Protective Action Guides (PAGs) for 
	radiation releases
	Rules dramatically weaken public protections.
	by Nuclear Information and Resource Service
	Global Research
	
	January 21, 2009
	Nuclear Information and Resource Service
	
	from
	
	GlobalResearch Website
	
	Just before leaving office, the 
	Bush Administration approved new 
	Protective 
	Action Guides (PAGs) for radiation releases that dramatically weaken public 
	protections. 
	
	 
	
	In particular, the new PAGs would permit radioactivity in 
	drinking water hundreds to millions of times higher than longstanding EPA 
	standards.
	 
	
	The PAGs weren't able to published in the Federal Register before 
	Inauguration, but unless the new Obama Administration pulls them back 
	immediately, they could be published in the next few days.
	
	The Order issued by the White House Tuesday to suspend all rulemaking 
	activities until the new Administration can review them might be interpreted 
	by Bush holdovers at EPA as strictly only covering formal rulemaking. In 
	order to avoid rulemaking legal requirements, the Bush Administration issued 
	these new standards as Protective Action Guides instead. 
	
	 
	
	So it is critical 
	to get EPA to immediately pull the PAGs back from the Federal Register.
	
	Please call the EPA Administrator's office at 202-564-4700 today and leave a 
	message, asking that the Radiation Protective Action Guides be withdrawn 
	immediately from publication in the Federal Register.
	
	
	For more information, see 
	
	http://www.committeetobridgethegap.org/pdf/radiation012109.pdf
	or contact Dan Hirsch of the Committee to Bridge the Gap at 831 336-8003,
	irsnet@nirs.org