|
Fact Sheets
Nuclear
Resisters: The women and men in this list are, as of December
3, 2001, in prison for acts of resistance to nuclear weapons and
war.
Health
Populations and individuals around the world have been affected
by the increase of radioactive materials in the global ecosystem.
Cancers, birth defects, genetic damage, lowered immunity to diseases:
these are only some of the potential effects of nuclear testing,
uranium mining, radioactive waste burial and all the phases of nuclear
weapons and nuclear energy production.
Environment
The environmental damage resulting from nuclear technology is
not limited to the two largest nuclear weapons states. All
nuclear weapons and nuclear energy producing nations have caused
some level of environmental contamination, both in their own countries
and abroad - such as, nuclear testing in the South Pacific, Nevada,
Kazakhstan, China, India and Pakistan; water and airborne discharges
from reprocessing plants in the UK and France; and uranium mining
in Namibia, Canada, former East Germany and Australia. Moreover,
the ongoing production of both nuclear weapons and nuclear power
continues to create nuclear waste. Any long-term approach
to clean-up must be tied to a halt in the production
of nuclear weapons, weapons usable materials and nuclear power.
Secrecy
The
nuclear age began in a shroud of secrecy that was the Manhattan Project. It
comprised three facilities in three different states. The primary site, Los
Alamos in New Mexico, was established in 1942 with no reference on a map, no
post office, no publicity. Although its physical presence was unknown, it was
here that a team of international scientists, supervised by General Leslie Groves
of the Army Corps of Engineers, worked to develop the bombs that destroyed Hiroshima
and Nagasaki.
Indigenous
Of the eight nations in the world that have
detonated nuclear weapons during the last 55 years, five have used the sacred
land of indigenous peoples. The United States, Russia, Britain, France and China
have tested their nuclear might on lands held sacred by the people
of First Nations. The Western Shoshone nation of North America, the Marshall
and other South Pacific Islanders, Australian Aboriginals, the Kazakhs, and
Tibetans are but a few of those whose land has been consistently contaminated
with nuclear poison.
Law
Weapons of mass
or indiscriminate destruction are now the object of a planetary taboo rooted
in the conscience of humankind and articulated through binding law. As the International
Court of Justice (ICJ), the judicial branch of the United Nations, affirmed
in its 1996 advisory opinion on nuclear weapons, under humanitarian law governing
the conduct of warfare states "must never use weapons that are incapable
of distinguishing between civilian and military targets" (emphasis added). The
Court held the threat or use of nuclear weapons to be generally illegal under
humanitarian and other law.
Religion
There are
many spiritual perspectives that challenge or help people to cope with living
in a world where nuclear weapons threaten all life on the planet. The following
draws on Christian and Buddhist attempts to grapple with the 21st century conundrum
of how to remain engaged against the impossible odds of the nuclear age. As
General Omar Bradley stated, "We live in an age of nuclear giants and ethical
infants, in a world that has achieved brilliance without wisdom, power without
conscience. We have solved the mystery of the atom and forgotten the lessons
of the Sermon on the Mount. We know more about war than we know about peace,
more about dying than we know about living".
|