DutchNews.nl,
Thursday 02 October 2014
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| (NOS/ANP) |
Letters
from health and safety inspectors and minutes of meeting show the defence
ministry was aware of the problem but did not take steps to protect staff until
11 years later, the broadcaster says.
One of the
documents in the hands of the Nos includes an army commandor stating in 1995
that 'the number of workers exposed to carcenogenic compounds should not be
more than strictly necessary'.
Toxicologists
Toxicologists
told the broadcaster that by 1994 officials were well aware of how to prevent
exposure to substances such as Chromium 6.
The story
broke in August when the Volkskrant said reports drawn up on behalf of the army
in 1999 and 2002 show defence ministry workers who maintained US tanks and
planes stationed in the Netherlands were exposed to high levels of toxic
Chromium 6.
Defence
minister Jeanine Hennis had told MPs in June there was nothing to suggest
workers were being exposed to high concentrations of dangerous chemicals.
Camouflage
That
statement followed complaints from soldiers that they may have been made ill by
the camouflage paint used in the maintenance of US tanks and jet fighters at
five bases in the border regions.
The reports
in the hands of the Volkskrant show the base paint used on military equipment
contained up to eight times more toxic Chromium 6 than was normal.
More than
100 former defence workers have so far come forward to make a claim against the
ministry. They are suffering from cancers and auto-immune diseases and want
compensation, the Volkskrant said.
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