A cloud of trepidation hovers over the Pacific island states and territories in the face of Japan ’ s move to go ahead with the disposal of ALPS-treated Fukushima wastewater into the sea . Amid speculation on the potential impact of TEPCO ’ s nuclear water discharge , the specter of the U . S . military ’ s nuclear legacy continues to haunt the region .
The unresolved compensation issue linked to the nuclear testing at Bikini Atoll , which involved the detonation of 24 nuclear weapons between 1946 and 1958 , continues to be a sore spot in the relationship between the U . S . and the Marshall Islands . Birth defects , leukemia , cancers and thyroid are prevalent in the Pacific island nation as a result of radiation poisoning . Adequate reparations remain a sticking point in the sealing of the Compact of Free Association between the U . S . and the Marshall Islands .
Guam has its own share of frustrations .
In 2005 , Guam celebrated the National Research Council ’ s report declaring the territory ’ s eligibility for compensation under the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act Amendments program . “ Guam did receive measurable fallout from atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons in the Pacific between 1946 and 1958 ,” read the council ’ s report , which recommended that people living on island during that period be compensated under RECA “ in a way similar to that of persons considered to be downwinders .”
The report established a correlation between nuclear testing and high incidences of cancer in Guam , which is the second leading cause of
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death on island .
About 67 nuclear devices were detonated by the Atomic Energy Commission in or around the Marshalls between 1946 and 1962 . “ The radiation emanating from these explosions severely affected those who lived in the Marshall Islands , resulting in everything from cancers to birth deformities ,” the report said . “ However , the radioactive fallout didn ’ t stop there : it extended downwind over 1,000 miles away to
Guam .”
In 2010 , a congressional blue-ribbon panel was formed to study in-depth radioactive contamination in Guam between 1946 to 1958 . In November 2012 , the blue-ribbon panel completed an action report , which determined that the military “ put the population of Guam in harm ’ s way knowingly and with total disregard for their well-being .” The impact of nuclear testing in the region , according to the report , “ was the largest ecological disaster in human history .”
The RECA program compensates those affected by the nuclear fallout in the Pacific .
It was a promising deal . But nearly two decades later , it remains an unfulfilled promise .
As of 2017 , the Justice Department had awarded more than $ 2 billion in “ compassionate compensation ” to eligible claimants under RECA , which provides up to $ 150,000 to victims of radiation . No one from Guam received a cent from the program during this cycle .
The Pacific Association of Radiation Survivors persisted in lobbying the U . S . Congress , occasionally catching rays of light , year after year .
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In January 2018 , PARS president Robert Celestial testified before the Judiciary Committee during a hearing of the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act Amendments of 2017 that would extend the program and add Guam to the list of eligible jurisdictions “ I am hopeful this time ,” Celestial said after his testimony . “ Hopefully , nothing else goes crazy in Washington D . C .”
Unfortunately , “ Washington D . C .” and “ crazy ” go hand in hand .
In 2019 , U . S . Sen . Mike Crapo ( R-Idaho ) filed a similar bill . Again . No luck for Guam .
The RECA program expired in 2022 . On June 7 , 2022 , President Biden signed into law the RECA Extension Act of 2022 , which extended the statutory deadline of filing to June 10 , 2024 .
Celestial saw another flicker of hope when the U . S . Senate last month adopted an amendment to the 2024 National Defense Authorization Act that proposes Guam ’ s inclusion into the program as a downwinder .
The amendment would expand the coverage area to allow more potential victims , those who lived downwind of above-ground atomic weapons tests in the 1950s and 1960s , known as “ downwinders ,” to file for compensation under RECA .
“ This is the farthest we ’ ve come ,” Celestial said .
But then again : “ Washington D . C .” and “ crazy ” go hand in hand . As of this writing , the U . S . Congress was locked in a standoff over several budgetary packages opposed by right-wing Republicans . The fate of the 2024 NDAA may face uncertainties as well .
For PARS , it has been an endless battle , but Celestial hopes it is won before the onset of a potential new wave of radiation claims that might confront Fukushima .
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