victimhood


France conducted its first nuclear test known as the "Gerboise Bleue" in February 1960 in the Sahara Desert - an atomic bomb that was four times the strength of Hiroshima. A total of 17 tests were carried out, four of them atmospheric detonations, and 13 underground.

Nuclear testing continued in the region until 1966, four years after the independence of Algeria from French colonial rule, due to a clause in the Evian Accords which were signed by the Provisional Government of the Algerian Republic (GPRA). The accords established the parameters for Algerian independence. The defeated colonial power demanded to be able to continue to destroy Algeria's environment and poison its people.

At the time of the tests, around 40,000 people lived in the affected area, and the tests had a horrific effect on these communities. Many were impacted directly, while others were poisoned over time due to the radiation. In fact, 60 years after Gerboise Bleue, babies are still being born with illnesses and malformations.

https://english.alaraby.co.uk/english/amp/comment/2021/2/12/frances-nuclear-colonial-legacy-in-algeria

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Algeria rights group to prosecute France for nuclear tests A human rights organisation that defends victims of French nuclear tests in Algeria announced that it is preparing a judicial file to be sub Middle East Monitor

14 Feb 22