Sunday, March 30, 2008

The Uranium States of AmeriKa

This as we have a bug up our ass over Iran!!!

Not only is the hypocrisy galling, but the blatant service to Iz-ray-HELL via Amerika's foreign policy reaches the point of nauseousness!!!


"Navajos wary of plans to mill uranium in New Mexico"

"by Kari Lydersen, The Washington Post | March 30, 2008

AMBROSIA LAKE, N.M. - Twenty years after uranium mining ceased in New Mexico amid plummeting prices for the ore, global warming and the soaring cost of oil are renewing interest in nuclear power - and in the state's uranium belt.

At least five companies are seeking state permits to mine the uranium reserves, estimated at 500 million pounds or more, and Uranium Resources Inc., a Texas-based company, wants to reopen a uranium mill in Ambrosia Lake.

Industry officials say a uranium boom could mean thousands of jobs and billions in royalties and taxes for the state.

But the deposits are in and around Navajo land, and the industry's poor record on health and safety as it extracted tons of the ore in past decades has soured many Navajos on uranium mining. In 2005, the Navajo nation banned uranium mining and milling on its land, and thousands of tribe members are receiving or seeking federal compensation for the health effects of past uranium exposure.

Like many Navajos who worked in the mines, Larry J. King didn't know then that there was anything dangerous about it. "We had no respirators," said King, who surveyed mine tunnels from 1975 to 1982. "You couldn't help but swallow it."

During mining's peak, from the 1950s to the early 1980s, about 400 million pounds of uranium were extracted from the region. At the end of the boom, around 1984, the price of uranium languished below $10 a pound. Mines shut down, and the United States began importing nearly all of its uranium. But by last summer, the price had rebounded to a record high of $136 a pound.

Though the mines created numerous jobs and substantial royalties for the Navajo and Laguna tribes, the decades of extraction took a heavy toll: lung cancer, kidney disease, birth defects, and other ailments at notably high levels among miners and families who lived among piles of uranium tailings - the ground-up waste from milling - and even used the material to build their homes.

All but one of the major companies now seeking to mine in New Mexico are newcomers to the state and have promised to do a better job than their predecessors. But King said, "I don't believe them one bit."

He blames his recent health problems on uranium. He remembers July 16, 1979, when more than 90 million gallons of uranium-contaminated water burst through the dam of a tailings holding pond and into the Puerco River running by his land. Another former uranium miner, Milton Head, 69, describes similar effects on people and livestock.

"Stubby Simpson was a picture of health, didn't smoke or drink, then he got lung cancer and lasted six months," Head said of another former miner. "Steers would turn yellow, their horns and hooves would slough off, like they were just drying up."

Head, who is not Navajo, is all for uranium as a fuel source but does not trust the federal government to regulate the industry.

None of Uranium Resources Inc.'s holdings are on the Navajo reservation, though there is some intersection with Navajo private allotted lands. Jurisdiction in the area is a complicated web of mineral and water rights underlying a checkerboard of tribal and nontribal holdings.

Uranium Resources Inc. chief operating officer, Richard Van Horn said the Navajo tribe's uranium mining ban could limit the company's plans but would not stop mining in the region."

Yup, that's AmeriKa!

Whether it is delivering Depleted Uranium to Iraq, Afghanistan or Serbia via airmail or poisoning our own own at home!!!

And we have what beef with the Iranians?