Search
JOIN OUR NETWORK

     

     

 

 

ARTICLE ARCHIVE

Niger

Areva, the French nuclear company, has been mining and milling uranium in Niger for more than 40 years, with dire environmental and health consequences. Now the company has been awarded rights there to the second largest new uranium mine in the world while the Niger government has issued close to 140 additional uranium mine prospecting rights to corporations from across the globe. Indigenous peoples, in particular the nomadic Touareg, have found their livelihoods and lives severely impacted.

.................................................................................................................................................................................................................

Entries from October 1, 2010 - October 31, 2010

Saturday
Oct162010

Areva never instituted the promised health observatory in Niger

Given the serious health issues surrounding the two Areva-owned uranium mines in Niger, an agreement was finalised in 2009 providing for the setting up of a health and safety observatory: medical staff, appointed by a joint committee representing the company and civil society, would examine any former miners who requested a check-up. If an occupational complaint linked to radiation was diagnosed, Areva would pay for treatment., However, writes Herve Kempf in The Guardian, "A year later there is still no sign of the observatory." Furthermore, Kempf continued, in February Greenpeace and Criirad, the independent French laboratory that has monitored radioactive contamination at the mines and in the communities, published another report alleging that there were serious hotspots in the town itself."