22 years ago, the United States-led NATO flagrantly launched an attack on Yugoslavia without the approval of the UN Security Council. After more than 20 years, people have not yet escaped the shadow of war. The 15 tons of depleted uranium bombs dropped by NATO have so far been harmed. Not shallow.

Serbian biologist Stankovic: It

takes 4.5 billion years for uranium to decay. This is a very long process. The abnormal phenomena caused by these radioactive materials will first cause cell mutations.

Grujčić, director of the clinical department of the Serbian Emergency Center:

As a clinician, I noticed that the tumors that occur frequently in the elderly are increasingly appearing in young people, and most of them turn into malignant tumors.

  According to a study by the Serbian Emergency Center, children born in Serbia after 1999 have multiple ectodermal tumors from 1 to 5 years old, multiple hematological malignancies from 5 to 9 years old, and a rapid increase in the incidence of brain tumors from 9 to 18 years old.

Kovacevich, then chief doctor of the Yugoslavian Radiation Protection Center:

In Serbia in 1981, 10,378 people died of malignant diseases (cancer), and the number changed little after that (until 1999).

In 2001, 20 years later, this number was approximately 18,000.

This means that the mortality rate has increased by 80%. Note that this is two years after NATO bombed the Yugoslavia in 1999.

Today, every year in Serbia, 35,000 people die

from diseases

and

25,000 people die from malignant diseases.

  After the war ended, eight Italian soldiers who participated in the war died of leukemia. The investigation committee of the Italian Ministry of Defense concluded that it was an "abnormal coincidence" to suffer from tumors of the lymphatic system.

As a NATO Italian Air Force pilot, Legero quit his job and founded the Army and Police Care Association, and decided to investigate the truth of the incident.

Legero, head of the Italian Military Police Care Association: The

military hospital used electron microscopes to observe the soldiers’ cancer cells. We found various types of heavy metals. One type of heavy metal has a special shape and a small body. It forms a spherical shape

at

3000 degrees,

and the only bomb

that

can produce this temperature on the battlefield

is the depleted uranium bomb.

  Internationally, many people describe the depleted uranium bomb as killing without blood because the powder produced when it explodes, whether it falls on the ground, infiltrates the ground, or spreads through the air and rivers to the surrounding area, once these powders are breathed by people Entering the body or entering the human body through small wounds can cause serious damage to the body, easily causing many cancers including leukemia and some liver and nervous system diseases, and even cause abortion and neonatal abnormalities in pregnant women.

"Depleted Uranium Bomb Victims Litigation Lawyers Group" lawyer Alexic:

There are more than 100 throwing points in Kosovo and Metohija. NATO uses 2 tons of depleted uranium in southern Serbia

and 13 in Kosovo and Metohija. Tons,

a total of 15 tons of depleted uranium.

It is

1,000 times more harmful than the atomic bombs dropped by the

United States on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan in 1945

.

  In March 2000, the UN peacekeeping force in Kosovo confirmed that a total of 31,000 depleted uranium bombs were used during NATO’s bombing of Yugoslavia, which is equivalent to the total amount of depleted uranium bombs used by the United States and other countries against Iraq during the Gulf War.

Legero, head of the Italian Military Police Care Association:

Let's ask the Americans, they are very calm.

Because they are well aware of their use of depleted uranium bombs, they certainly will not test depleted uranium bombs in the United States.

During the Gulf War, they were testing depleted uranium bombs for the first time, and the destructive effects of depleted uranium bombs dropped by the United States in the Balkans were exactly the same as they expected.

  As of May 2019, 366 Italian soldiers who participated in NATO military operations had died of cancer, and 7,500 were suffering from illness; an international team of lawyers entrusted by more than 1,000 cancer patients in Serbia is launching a lawsuit against NATO member states participating in the war.

However, the acceptance of evidence has become difficult. To directly establish a link between cancer and depleted uranium bomb contamination requires a lot of medical evidence.

As the only country that invented and used depleted uranium bombs, the

United States has always denied that depleted uranium bombs are the direct cause of the "Gulf War Syndrome" and the "Balkan Syndrome".

Headquarters reporter Zhang Ying:

I heard you say that the power of truth is infinite.

So in your opinion, why does an international military organization like NATO still not publicly acknowledge this established fact?

Legero, head of the Italian Military Police Care Association:

Because of political and economic interests.

  As early as 2006, British biologist Roger Coghill, based on figures released by the US Pentagon, calculated that the nuclear pollution caused by NATO's depleted uranium bombs dropped in Serbia was equivalent to 3% of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant spill.

Gruicic, Director of the Clinical Center of Serbia Emergency Center: The

Americans and NATO understand very well.

Why are there so many poisonous objects left behind?

Everyone understands that

this is genocide

.

  The city of Vranje, Serbia, which is close to Kosovo, is the hardest hit area of ​​depleted uranium bombs. Depleted uranium bombs have been thrown in 4 villages and 5 places. After the war, the population has dropped sharply for more than 20 years. ...