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                  | 1,520 rounds fired on the Torishima Firing Range |  |  | 
              
                
                  | Only 16% of penetrators collected |  |  
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                  |  Supposed to have been removed 
  But still in storage in Okinawa       Cartridges sold as "steel scrap" 
 Okinawa's Kumejima Island on the East China
                  Sea is about 100 kilometers (63 miles) west
                  of Naha City. About 25 kilometers (16 miles)
                  north of Kumejima Island lies the Torishima
                  Firing Range. The property is only 3.9 hectares
                  (9.6 acres). Except for the craggy rocks
                  on the east tip, the Ryuku limestone hillside
                  and rocky beach on the island's south side
                  have turned to gravel. Shells litter the
                  slope.
 
 
                    
                      
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                        | The Torishima Firing Range in the East China Sea, where
                        the US Marine Corps' Harriers fired DU shells.
                        Kumejima Island is visible beyond the rocky
                        outcropping on the east side blackened by
                        bombings. (Nakazato Village, Okinawa Prefecture)
 | The south hillside and rocky beach of Torishima
                        Island, now turned to gravel. DU shell penetrators
                        are probably buried on the slope where large
                        shells lie. (Nakazato Village, Okinawa Prefecture) |  
  Scars from a half century of exercises 
 On the north side are large scooped-out areas
                  that appear to be craters created by large
                  bombs. Bombs have scorched the east end as
                  well. In contrast to verdant Kumejima Island
                  visible beyond the waves, denuded Torishima,
                  battered by bombing practice for more than
                  half a century, looks so ravaged it seems
                  to cry in pain.
 
 On December 5 and 7, US Marine Harrier bombers
                  fired 600 rounds of 25mm DU shells on Torishima
                  Island. They fired 320 rounds of DU on January
                  24. Two bombers participated in the exercises
                  on all three dates.
 
 By the end of April 1997, the US military
                  in Japan had retrieved 233 of the DU penetrators
                  (weight: 148 grams), the cores from the fired
                  shells. Only 247, or 16% of the total number
                  of penetrators, have been retrieved so far.
 
 
 
 
                    
                      
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                        | Some of the used DU shell cartridges that
                        a scrap business bought from the US military
                        as "steel scrap" and kept on its
                        property in Nishihara-cho. Each emits a radiation
                        dose of 0.02~0.03 micro-gray per hour, which
                        the Science and Technology Agency dismisses
                        as "having no effect on human bodies."
                        (Nishihara-cho, Okinawa Prefecture) |   Science and Technology Agency: "No effect" 
 The DU penetrators that struck the north
                  slope of the island and the rocky outcropping
                  on the east tip burned in the impact, becoming
                  minute oxidized particles that likely dispersed
                  in the air. They may have migrated on wintry
                  north winds to Kumejima Island or elsewhere.
                  Most of the retrieved penetrators were taken
                  from the gravel on the south side, but many
                  may still be deeply embedded in the earth.
 
 Were all the DU rounds fired in a single
                  flight, or over multiple flights? The answer
                  to this question is important. The size of
                  the island suggests that many penetrators
                  may be submerged in the sea, as stated by
                  the US military.
 
 The US military in Japan claims that it has
                  already removed contaminated soil from Torishima
                  Island. Because a radius of three nautical
                  miles (5.5 kilometers) around the island
                  is off limits, the US claims that no threat
                  whatsoever is posed to the environment or
                  to human bodies. The Science and Technology
                  Agency's Nuclear Safety Bureau concludes
                  that "no DU contamination" has
                  so far been detected in any studies of the
                  soil, atmosphere, surrounding seawater, or
                  fish habitat of Torishima or Kumejima islands.
 
 Basking in the sea spray, I returned to Kumejima
                  Island and Nakazato Village, which has administrative
                  control over Torishima Island. The island's
                  children struck booming taiko drums and performed
                  the traditional dance Eisa in the square
                  in front of Umigame (Sea Turtle) Hall to
                  celebrate its opening. In his address, Village
                  Headman Kyuzo Takazato (64) exhorted the
                  families in attendance to "protect the
                  bountiful nature and culture of Kumejima
                  Island and preserve its environment for the
                  sake of the Sea Turtle.
 
 After the ceremony, we moved to the village
                  office, where Headman Takazato expressed
                  grave concerns about DU munitions.
 
 
 
 
                    
                      
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                        | Children of the island perform the drum dance
                        Eisa in the square in front of the Kumejima
                        Umigame Hall to celebrate its opening. The
                        sea around the island is studded by beautiful
                        coral reefs. (Nakazato Village, Okinawa Prefecture) |   Abundant fisheries also sacrificed 
 "The US military and Japan's Science
                  and Technology Agency try to reassure us,
                  but we island residents can't feel easy about
                  it. Last May 17, I and the headman of Gushikawa
                  Village together went through the prefectural
                  government to ask the national government
                  and the US military to provide physical exams
                  for the 10,000 people living on the island,
                  and to continue recovering the penetrators.
                  Immediately afterwards came the news that
                  the US Air Force is storing DU shells in
                  the Kadena Ammunition Storage Area, and that
                  DU cartridges like those used on Torishima
                  Island were found. They tell us to trust
                  them, but how can we?"
 
 Off shore from Torishima Island, the fishing
                  is reportedly excellent for tuna, bonito,
                  squid and other important species. Tetsuya
                  Tanahara (48) of the Kumejima Island Fishing
                  Cooperative (331 members) joined our conversation
                  and told me that on weekends, when there
                  are no exercises, quite a few leisure boats
                  can be seen motoring out from Naha to Torishima
                  Island. However, though it has not been declared
                  off-limits, all cooperative members have
                  been warned not to fish on the north side
                  of Kumejima Island.
 
 "When you get caught in their drills,
                  you never know what will fall on you. For
                  safety's sake, we have to sacrifice that
                  area, no matter how good the fishing is."
                  Regret lined Tanahara's sunburned face.
 
 
  No response to the fears 
 The residents of Kumejima Island want the
                  US military and the national government to
                  remove exploded and unexploded DU shells
                  from Torishima Island and return it to its
                  former clean state. "Tourism, farming,
                  and fishing make good use of nature's beauty
                  and abundance. There's nothing good about
                  a firing range, either from the industrial
                  or the health viewpoint," insists Gushikawa
                  Village Headman Seiroku Uchima (59), whom
                  I met later.
 
 For six or seven years, a scrap company in
                  Nishihara-machi, located in the middle of
                  Okinawa's main island, has been storing piles
                  of DU shell (25 mm) cartridges purchased
                  from US military. DU shells (30 mm) are still
                  being stored in the Kadena Ammunition Storage
                  Area. Amazed by these reports, officials
                  of the prefectural government, which serves
                  as liaison between the island, the national
                  government, and the US military, are growing
                  distrustful. They fear for the health of
                  the residents, as do the residents themselves.
 
 They are pressing the US military in Okinawa
                  to investigate when and where the discovered
                  DU cartridges were used. "How were these
                  dangerous cartridges allowed to be sold to
                  the private sector, where civilians would
                  be exposed to them?" Why are DU shells
                  still stored in Okinawa, after the Marine
                  Corps announced that they had all been removed?"
 
 No response is forthcoming from the US military
                  in Okinawa nor from its headquarters in Japan.
 
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