Association
Moruroa e tatou
Siège :
563 Boulevard Pomare
Papeete
Tahiti
Tél :
+ 689. 460 666
E-mail :
moruroaetatou@mail.pf
Site
internet : www.moruroaetatou.com
Papeete
April 22 2009
Historic trial in
Tahiti
The
victims of nuclear testing call
France
to account
On
Monday 27 April 2009
, eight Polynesian victims of French nuclear testing will launch a case against
France
before the Tribunal de Travail (industrial relations court) in
Papeete
,
Tahiti
.
For the first time ever in
French Polynesia
,
France
will have to take responsibility for the consequences of nuclear testing on the
health of the Polynesian people.
Of the eight plaintiffs who are former workers from the Moruroa nuclear
test site, three are still alive and suffering from cancers of the blood. The
five others have already died, mainly from leukaemia, and will be represented at
the trial by their widows.
After months of preliminaries, the date for hearings and speeches for the
defence has been set for 27 April, in the largest courtroom of the Papeete
Courts. The hearings will be filmed to preserve the memory of this historic
moment. On this day, several hundred former Moruroa workers will come to support
their comrades and the widows. Representatives of Moruroa e Tatou (the
association of former Moruroa workers), the Protestant Maohi Church and
community organisations from around the country will be present in the court,
together with the President of French Polynesia, Mr. Oscar Temaru, who himself
worked at Moruroa.
In 1966,
France
imposed its nuclear test program on the people of
French Polynesia
, without even consulting them. Even though
France
halted its nuclear tests in January 1996, after years of international pressure
and after 193 nuclear tests, the health and environmental consequences have been
disastrous. Polynesian women have the highest rate of thyroid cancer in the
world, and Moruroa and Fangataufa Atolls will remain barren and contaminated for
thousands of years.
After years of lies and speeches claiming the tests were harmless, Polynesian
victims and their lawyers will demand the truth, in spite of
France
’s July 2008 decision to forbid access to the nuclear archives.
The plaintiffs are asking for compensation, due to the suffering they have
undergone because of illness which has destroyed their family life or left their
wives alone to care for children after their premature death. Moruroa e Tatou
says that other cases will come before the courts, with other victims waiting
for their case files to be finalised so they can lodge a case against the French
government.
The trial on 27 April in Papeete gives hope to all the victims of French
nuclear testing, especially those in the Sahara desert of Algeria as well as in
French Polynesia, who suffered France’s nuclear aggression which was imposed
on defenceless peoples. This trial must have repercussions at the national and
international level: victims of nuclear testing around the world must know that
the nuclear powers will not remain immune from punishment.
Media from
France
and around the world are invited to
Papeete
to cover this event. Moruroa e Tatou will set up a press centre with
Internet access and provide documentation on the cases. Journalists will be able
to meet with the former workers from Moruroa and the widows of those who have
died, as well as people who’ve been involved in campaigning for the rights of
nuclear test victims. As much as possible, English-French translation will be
provided.
Representatives of the media and others in need of information are invited
to contact the Moruroa e Tatou association who will be coordinating
information and activities around the trial.
--Association
Moruroa e tatou