Fri, 10/30/2009 - 13:58
- Length: 5:04 minutes (4.63 MB)
- Format: MP3 Mono 44kHz 128Kbps (CBR)
In the 1940s, the U.S. government and private companies began mining uranium on tribal lands in the Southwest. The industry went on to develop atomic weapons for World War II and the cold war in the decades to come. In the 1980s, with the draw down of cold war tensions, the uranium industry abandoned thousands of mines in the region. It also left a deadly legacy of contamination.
This week the US Senate approved a resolution designating today, October 30th, as a national day of remembrance for the half-million uranium workers in the country. But the Navajo, Pueblo and other Native American people in the Southwest are still fighting to recover.
We’re joined by Anna Rondon. She’s Navajo and the coordinator of the Southwest Indigenous Uranium Forum. The group has been organizing around the issue for more than 20 years and just wrapped up a forum on uranium and the nuclear chain last weekend.
http://www.fsrn.org/audio/native-american-communities-cope-with-toxic-legacy-uranium-mining/5680
No comments:
Post a Comment
While we welcome comments regarding the objective content of a posted item, we do not publish personal attacks of any kind.
Neither do we allow our comments sections to be used as anonymous message boards. This means that we do not post comments that, in actuality, are messages that should be emailed privately to others. We currently permit anonymous posts and visits so that visitors need not leave or register an email address in order to visit and/or comment; thus we cannot assist you in obtaining another visitor's contact information. We respect our visitors' privacy and expect that you do the same.
We do not forward comments from blog visitors to other blog visitors, private citizens, authors, etc. As stated above, we make no attempt to identify any of our visitors; thus it is impossible for us to forward messages. Please don't even ask.
We sincerely appreciate your visit and your cooperation. We hope you enjoy your time spent with us and invite you to return at your leisure.
Please leave your comments below.