The Todal
2024-09-16 11:14:26 UTC
This documentary was broadcast recently on Channel 4, and was about the
young British sailors who witnessed the H bomb tests (Operation Grapple)
on Christmas Island in 1957-8. Also those who witnessed tests in
Australia in 1952-7.
The claim is that they have had long term health problems - cancers of
various types - and that many of their children were born deformed. And
that they are denied compensation by a callous UK government.
I found it very disappointing, a missed opportunity to set out a
persuasive case for compensation. One irritation was the presenter who
pronounced it "nucular" instead of "nuclear". Why do people, some of
them important politicians, do that?
There was no input from doctors or scientists, only from ex-servicemen
and their grown up children, and a newspaper reporter.
No explanation for why all these servicemen were assembled on the island
to witness the explosion, if not as guinea-pigs to find out the effect
of the radiation on them. And if that was the purpose, presumably
government scientists produced reports, maybe secret in those days,
evaluating the evidence and monitoring the effects for years or decades.
One troubling allegation is that all the film badges worn by the
servicemen to monitor their exposure were just collected up and thrown
in the rubbish. Still, that is what you might expect to happen after the
readings had been written down somewhere.
It might be a major scandal or, also possible, it might be that the
cancers and the birth defects were explicable as statistically normal or
caused by other factors. Maybe there should be a public inquiry but
first there ought to be full disclosure from the MoD.
But anyone making a documentary ought to provide a careful analysis of
this House of Commons briefing document:
https://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/CBP-9903/CBP-9903.pdf
young British sailors who witnessed the H bomb tests (Operation Grapple)
on Christmas Island in 1957-8. Also those who witnessed tests in
Australia in 1952-7.
The claim is that they have had long term health problems - cancers of
various types - and that many of their children were born deformed. And
that they are denied compensation by a callous UK government.
I found it very disappointing, a missed opportunity to set out a
persuasive case for compensation. One irritation was the presenter who
pronounced it "nucular" instead of "nuclear". Why do people, some of
them important politicians, do that?
There was no input from doctors or scientists, only from ex-servicemen
and their grown up children, and a newspaper reporter.
No explanation for why all these servicemen were assembled on the island
to witness the explosion, if not as guinea-pigs to find out the effect
of the radiation on them. And if that was the purpose, presumably
government scientists produced reports, maybe secret in those days,
evaluating the evidence and monitoring the effects for years or decades.
One troubling allegation is that all the film badges worn by the
servicemen to monitor their exposure were just collected up and thrown
in the rubbish. Still, that is what you might expect to happen after the
readings had been written down somewhere.
It might be a major scandal or, also possible, it might be that the
cancers and the birth defects were explicable as statistically normal or
caused by other factors. Maybe there should be a public inquiry but
first there ought to be full disclosure from the MoD.
But anyone making a documentary ought to provide a careful analysis of
this House of Commons briefing document:
https://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/CBP-9903/CBP-9903.pdf