Last week I wrote an overview of the history of French nuclear testing in the South Pacific, and this week's post adds to it with a recent announcement by the highest legal authority in France regarding the tendency of the victims compensation board to find that risks from nuclear tests were negligible. The Council of State (Le Conseil d’État) rebuked the authority (CIVEN) for withholding data and, in many cases, concluding without evidence that risk was negligible. As Bruno Barrillot, an expert on this issue, explained it previously (see last week's post), the new (2010) law for compensating victims seemed like it would provide long-awaited compensation for victims of the 1966-1996 testing period, but in actuality almost all applicants have been denied compensation. The government seems to be slowly moving in the right direction with this ruling, but this does not appear to be a complete solution, and it is, of course, too little and too late for many of the victims.
It is notable that the terms used in the ruling refer only to external radiation exposure. This is a recurring pattern throughout the world in all official programs dealing with the harm caused by military and civilian nuclear activities. The official criteria steadfastly ignore the issue of compensation for internal contamination caused by absorption of beta and alpha particles. These particles could damage health either by temporary or long-lasting presence in the body, so the degree of exposure is impossible to determine. Such testing, being very expensive and impractical, was seldom done on each possibly affected individual. In order to justly compensate people suffering from health effects, governments would have to presume causality without strong evidence, and internal contamination would have to at least start to have some mention in official discourse.
It is notable that the terms used in the ruling refer only to external radiation exposure. This is a recurring pattern throughout the world in all official programs dealing with the harm caused by military and civilian nuclear activities. The official criteria steadfastly ignore the issue of compensation for internal contamination caused by absorption of beta and alpha particles. These particles could damage health either by temporary or long-lasting presence in the body, so the degree of exposure is impossible to determine. Such testing, being very expensive and impractical, was seldom done on each possibly affected individual. In order to justly compensate people suffering from health effects, governments would have to presume causality without strong evidence, and internal contamination would have to at least start to have some mention in official discourse.
Communique issued by the French Council of State (Le Conseil d’État) on Ruling
no.
378325 December 8, 2015
Translation of:
The Council of State has specified
the conditions to be applied in the compensation program for victims suffering
from illnesses resulting from exposure to ionizing radiation due to nuclear
tests.
The Council of State has
issued a statement for the first time regarding the application of the law of
January 5, 2010, a law that covers compensation for the victims of nuclear
testing. This law admits, in principle, that when a person suffers from a
radiation-induced illness after having stayed during determined periods in
French Polynesia or in Algeria, his or her illness is regarded as having been
caused by exposure to ionizing radiation due to nuclear effects.* Such persons
thus have a right to compensation because the state is responsible for their
suffering. In each case, the law admits that this presumption of causality can be
denied if, considering the nature of the illness and the conditions of
exposure, it can be established that there is a negligible risk attributable to
nuclear tests.
The Committee for
Compensation for the Victims of Nuclear Tests (CIVEN—le comité d’indemnisation des victimes des
essais nucléaires),
is charged with ruling on applications for compensation. The Council of State
has specified the criteria that CIVEN must use to evaluate the negligible character
of the risk of developing an illness attributable to nuclear tests. The
criteria take into account the latency period of the illness, the sex of the applicant,
his or her age at the time of diagnosis, location at the time of the nuclear
tests, the functions effectively performed by the applicant, the conditions of
exposure, and the missions of his or her military unit at the time of the
tests.
The Council of State also
ruled that CIVEN should rely on the received dose of ionizing radiation, and it
should release the results of contamination surveys to the persons concerned
and to persons in a comparable situation to the claimants. When such
information is not available in cases in which surveys would have been required,
the Council of State found that the presumption of causality cannot be dismissed
because it is impossible to establish in such cases that the risk was
negligible.
* This may be an error in
the French version of the text which uses the word effets (effects) when the context seems to require essais (tests, referring to nuclear
tests).
About Le Conseil d’État
(from the official English
page):
Merci, pour les suppléments d'information. Vous faites un bon travail utile pour tous. Il faut du temps bien sur. Jean-Paul. Les oubliés du nucléaire.
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