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NEWS & LETTERS, October 2002

Over 500 protest Army's toxic weapons

Anniston, Ala.--A crowd of over 500 marched in protest here in September against the Army's plan to burn chemical weapons. A third of them were African American. Over 30 groups participated. Many of us came from out of town, such as Defense Depot Memphis Tennessee--Concerned Citizens Committee, and Pine Bluff Citizens for Safe Disposal. Food Not Bombs made food for the whole group. We heard Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth and Martin Luther King III, who spoke out against burning chemical weapons in that small town and asked why the federal government had chosen to put the incinerator in the midst of the Black community.

The protest was organized by the Berea, Kentucky, Chemical Weapons Working Group and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. The Kentucky group fights against the unsafe disposal of military chemical weapons. They believe in neutralizing the weapons rather than incineration. There is technology that can break down lethal gasses, making them less toxic, instead of burning these chemical weapons in toxic incinerators that have been proven unsafe.

Any accident with a toxic waste incinerator can kill or endanger all those in the area of exposure. Over 35,000 mostly Black people live in the six-mile radius of the incinerator and could receive lethal doses of nerve gas if there was an accident at the Anniston Army depot where the weapons to be burned are stored.

The technology used to burn weapons is dangerous, there's always a chance of a leak and exposure. The reason we're so upset about Anniston is that neutralization technology is proven and the kind of incinerator they want to use at Anniston has failed over and over again--as in Utah and Hawaii. The first facility is built and has failed the first three tests. The second facility is built and they don't even want to test it, just start burning. It's racist that they want to put these toxic sites in the Black communities in Pine Bluff, Ark., and Anniston, Ala.

Employees from Utah, where the incinerator was shut down, were at Anniston because the Utah incinerator failed and exposed the workers to toxins that made them sick. An Anniston activist said he got a FedEx package from the Federal Emergency Management Agency--a big roll of plastic and duct tape. He was told if there was a release he should put plastic over their windows and seal it with the tape. That was in the white community. In Memphis they told us the same thing, but for our Black community, they didn't send us the plastic or tape. It just shows the little bitty ways they discriminate.

One thing that Rev. Shuttlesworth said is that instead of Bush worrying about the chemical weapons in Iraq, he should worry about them right here in Anniston. I thought he was brave to say this. He said if the army didn't do what they were supposed to do in Anniston, they were going to come back. But marching can only do so much. It's fine, but without a boycott, or some kind of muscle behind it, it only goes so far.

--Doris Bradshaw

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