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26 August 2010 University of Basel

Sacred Land, Poisoned Peoples

Pre-conference: "Uranium Mining, Health and Indigenous Peoples"

Around the globe, some seventy-five percent of uranium mining takes place on the lands of indigenous peoples. The largest uranium reserves are found in Canada and Australia; uranium is also mined throughout Latin America and in Kazakhstan, Niger, Russia, Namibia and Uzbekistan. Exploration for further uranium ore bodies is presently underway in Tanzania, Mali, and the Amazon region of Brazil.

 

The identities of indigenous peoples are strongly tied to their environment. Uranium mining adversely affects indigenous cultures by defiling sacred sites, contaminating local natural resources and by threatening the health of coming generations. Open pit uranium mining regularly contaminates water tables; tailings retain up to 80% of the original ore body’s radioactivity.
The most common fatal health effect is lung cancer (attributable to the radon released into the atmosphere during the mining and onsite milling processes). Nonrespiratory carcinogenic outcomes include leukemia, stomach cancer, liver cancer, cancer of the intestines, kidney cancer, and skin cancer. Regions hosting uranium mining exhibit collateral spikes of psychic disorders and genetic damage. 
Though the effects of uranium mining add up to a glaring violation of human rights, authorities and the media fail to take any serious notice.

This conference will offer representatives of indigenous peoples endangered by uranium mining a distinguished European venue to tell their stories.  They will have the opportunity to strengthen their action networks by meeting with politicians, members of NGOs, and, from around the globe, people struggling around the globe to end uranium mining exactly as they themselves are.
A „Talking Stick“ will help make palpable the broad cultural diversity of the conference speakers. Whoever holds the stick has our ears, our attention. The conference will be structured like a journey around the globe – Germany – Canada – USA – Australia - India– Namibia - Niger – South America – Russia. Experts will act as interpretive stewards along our travels by supplementing eyewitness accounts with results from the most recent scientific studies impacting the conference’s complex of themes:  uranium, radiation, health. 
We look forward to welcoming you to the University of Basel.

Yours

Günter Baitsch, PSR / IPPNW Switzerland – Frank Uhe, IPPNW Germany - Claus Biegert, Nuclear Free Future Award – Günter Wippel, uranium-network – Christoph Wiedmer, GfbV Switzerland – James Albert, GfbV Germany – Helena Nyberg, Incomindios Switzerland

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Read or download the new folder with the declaration of basel,
the IPPNW-resolution on uranium
and the essay "The death that creeps from the earth".

 

FIND FOTOS FROM THE CONGRESS ON flickr

Congress Organizers:

 

PSR / IPPNW Switzerland

IPPNW Germany

Nuclear Free Future Award

 

In cooperation with:

 

AG uranium-network.org

Society for Threatened Peoples Germany

Society for Threatened Peoples Switzerland

INCOMINDIOS Schweiz