logo
The health impact of nuclear tests in French Polynesia – archive, 1981

The health impact of nuclear tests in French Polynesia – archive, 1981

The Guardian28-05-2025

By Christopher Price
17 September 1981
A recent Canard cartoon shows Adam and Eve looking at an H-bomb. 'Look, H for Hernu,' (the new Socialist defence minister), says Adam. 'Yes and for Horror, Holocaust, Hecatomb and Hiroshima,' adds Eve.
French Socialists have never hitherto allowed the nuclear issue to dominate their politics. If it is beginning to do so now it is partly because keeping their independent nuclear deterrent, which they continue to test underground in Muroroa atoll in French Polynesia, implies continuing colonial domination of the islands of the South Pacific – an issue which is very much alive, both among the Indigenous people of the Pacific and in the rank and file of the Socialist party in France.
The official position – 'auto-determination' – as stated by Mr Henri Emmanuelli, the French Colonial minister when he visited France's Pacific colonies was that he would discuss anything if a democratic majority wanted to. But he also said that recent election results made a referendum on the subject unnecessary.
That none of these three groups of islands (Polynesia, New Caledonia, and Wallis and Futuna) can immediately prove a majority for independence is partly due to strenuous French efforts over the years to stamp on emerging independence movements. More powerful than anything else [influencing the calls for independence] are the pollutant effects of nuclear tests on the human and natural environment. They are now beginning to make themselves felt. Hitherto everything that happens on Mururoa has been officially secret. But Mr Hernu has now a new 'frankness' about the tests in an effort to allay anxiety; and immediately after he left the Centre d'Expérimentation du Pacifique issued its first-ever admission of an accident; it was not safe to swim off Mururoa.
In fact, authoritative reports state that there is now a crack 15 to 19 inches wide and over half a mile long in the atoll below sea level; that radioactive leaks into the Pacific have been taking place for many years; that a neighbouring atoll, Fangataufa, has been literally blasted out of the sea.
It is not yet possible to gauge the effect of such leaks, but coupled with the profound disquiet about Japanese plans to use the Pacific as a nuclear waste dumping ground, fears about pollution of fish and other marine life and consequently poisoning of the whole ocean, island populations will undoubtedly put further pressure on the Mitterrand government to reconsider its nuclear testing policy.
'Why don't they do it in Nice?' was the one constant question put to me by the Polynesians. It echoed 'Mururoa and Auvergne', the most telling of the posters in the campaign which forced the French, eight years ago, to put the tests underground. Now there is a new twist to the story. It's not just H-bombs the French are exploding inside Mururoa.
It was confirmed by Mr Giscard in June 1980 that France had been undertaking feasibility studies of neutron bombs since 1976, and this week Mr Mauroy, the Socialist prime minister, committed his government to strengthening France's strategic nuclear arsenal and to the development of the neutron bomb. The knowledge that France is as keen as the US on upping the nuclear option can only add to the disquiet.
On top of this there is mounting, though not yet definitive evidence of cancer and brain tumours in the area, especially among the young. The French authorities counter that there is still less radioactivity in Polynesia than in the Massif Central. Maybe, but the fact that they go to quite extraordinary lengths of security in the treatment of such cases in French hospitals, suggesting a pathological desire to suppress such evidence as exists. One Actuel reporter, Mr Luis González-Mata, who tried to investigate the issue in Polynesia and in France, met continuous hostility.
So far the French government's response to the political pressure has been to offer that decentralisation of local government to its overseas territories which the towns and cities of France are soon to enjoy. But it will be pressed to go further. The Pacific Forum comprising all independent Pacific countries, decided in Vanuatu in August to send a delegation to Mr Mitterrand demanding to know his intentions.
This is an edited extract. Read the article in full.
Mururoa has been the centre of French nuclear tests for decades, largely in secret and often with scant regard for the people who live nearby. For the first time the native workers and their families tell their side of the story.
7 September 1990
Manutahi started work as a welder on Mururoa in 1965 at the age of 32. That was before the tests had started. He worked on the construction of the blockhouses Dindon and Denise.
In 1965 and at the beginning of 1966, we were allowed to eat all the fish in the lagoon but when we returned in 1967, we were forbidden to eat any. I worked mainly on Fangataufa where we were building a new blockhouse called 'Emperor.' It was on Fangataufa that I saw the areas of worst contamination when I went with the guys checking the atoll with Geiger counters. When there was contamination the light would go on and the indicator started to move. In one area the indicator went very high. It was forbidden to touch anything and there were barriers to prevent people from entering the area.
Sign up to This is Europe
The most pressing stories and debates for Europeans – from identity to economics to the environment
after newsletter promotion
It was during the drilling work that I got contaminated. I was working in a little hole trying to dismantle an old pipe. I wasn't careful enough and got splashed by some water that had been left in the hole. It was mainly my hair that got wet as I wasn't wearing any protective gear on my head. I tried to wash it but it was difficult to get the stuff out. When I went into the decontamination chamber all the alarms went off. I washed my hair three times but it was still radioactive … So a specialist had to use some special product to decontaminate me.
I know of a quite a number of people who gave got sick working at Mururoa and Fangataufa but I don't know what was wrong with them. I think that a lot of them had been poisoned from eating contaminated fish.
Tama began working at Mururoa in the 1960s as an office worker.
I got sick from eating fish several times. I was itchy all over and my skin peeled just like a snake. One of my friends was less fortunate he died after eating fish and mussels from the sea.
I left my job at Mururoa even though I earned as much as a member of the Territorial Assembly and got free flights home every weekend, because of a terrible accident I saw. The first French neutron bomb test codenamed Meknes was supposed to take place on 7 July 1979. A big bunker had been built just for this test. Inside the bunker was a container in which the bomb lay. Above the bunker itself was a control room which was connected to it with a thick double-glazed window. Before entering the main room, you had to go into a room where you put on an 'astronaut' suit. You had to go through a system of several automatic doors before entering the room containing the bomb. There were only two workers inside the bunker at a time and they only worked there for two hours at a time. All in all there was a team of 17 people.
On 6 July 6 the accident happened. I had just finished tea. I had been replaced in the control room by one of my mates. While I was walking back up the steps to the control room I was about halfway up the explosion occurred. My colleague was flung out of the control room just in front of me dead instantly. Another 'astronaut' my boss, Rene Villette was killed inside the bunker. The other 'astronaut' had just been on his way out and was severely burnt. He was evacuated to France and died soon afterwards.
I asked for an immediate discharge but, while my French workmates were sent home after two weeks, I had to stay on for another two months. I think it was because I was a union member and the military didn't want me to go back to Tahiti and tell people there what had happened, especially as anti-nuclear feeling was growing there.
Tolmata has four surviving children. While her husband was working at Mururoa, she had six other babies who died.
Our first and eldest child was born in 1975. She always seems to be sick with a chronic cough and stomach pains but she goes to school and is doing alright there. My second baby was born prematurely at seven and a half months and died the day he waw born.
My third baby was born at home at full term but died there two weeks later. She had a skin problem. Her skin would come off immediately if it was touched. The doctors said that the baby was fine but obviously she was not. No one knows the cause of her condition.
Eugene, my fourth baby, was born at full term but died when he was two months old. He had diarrhoea and we took him to Mamao, the hospital in Tahiti. The diarrhoea continued for some time. When it stopped, it was replaced by another condition. The baby became rigid, like wood. Every part of his body was racked by continuous muscular contractions and he had a high temperature. It was impossible to open his fists. The doctors would not talk about his condition. He was at Mamao for two weeks and then he died.
The doctors did not tell us anything and refused to fill out his death certificate. Without a death certificate the baby could not be buried so I pleaded with the doctors. They told me to get my general practitioner to fill in the form. The nurses at the hospital told me to tell people, if anyone should ask me, that my baby had died en route and not in the hospital. In the end I had to give in and ask my general practitioner to fill out the death certificate so that my child could be buried. I have no idea why all this happened and there was nothing that we could do about it. On top of that, we are angry that we were not allowed to stay with him in the hospital when he was so sick. Because of that we weren't there when he died. I think my children have died because my husband worked at Mururoa.
Tupou lived and worked on Fangataufa and four years during the first underground tests there. His job was chef d'equipe with a group of workers looking after the drilling gear.
After each underground explosion there was a sort of tidal wave that washed over part of Fangataufa and a few days later thousands of stinking dead fish washed up on the shore. Initially there was no ciguatera, but then we were told not to fish any more. We couldn't eat coconuts or anything else that grew there. I know people who got sick and were evacuated but nobody told us what the problem was. Nobody told us whether there were any dangers or what effect the dangers would have. Most of the island was fenced off but we were only told to respect the signs. If we didn't on the first occasion we got a warning, on the second we were sent back to Tahiti immediately. But, of course, we went fishing all the same.
The problem is the amount of unemployment in Tahiti. People see all the luxury goods, the fancy cars and the beautiful homes and they want to get them too. Just to earn some money to feed their families, they have no choice but to go out there to Mururoa and Fangataufa and work under those dangerous conditions, even though they may not want to at all.
Testimonies Inside Stories of Mururoa Test Site, published this week by Greenpeace New Zealand. This is an edited extract. Read the article in full.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Challengers had a US man winning the French Open. Reality is very different
Challengers had a US man winning the French Open. Reality is very different

The Guardian

time25 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Challengers had a US man winning the French Open. Reality is very different

The most shocking moment of the 2024 psychosexual tennis film Challengers is not the traumatic knee injury, any frame from the quasi-sex scenes, or the passionate rally with which the movie concludes. It's the reveal that one of the characters, American ATP tennis player Art Donaldson, has won the French Open twice, a stat so foreign to US men we must have a sequel simply for Donaldson to explain how he found success on clay. No American man has lifted the trophy – or even made the semi-finals – on the Parisian clay courts since Andre Agassi did so in 1999. And at the time of Challengers' release, no American man had made the quarter-finals since (bet you won't guess this one) Agassi in 2003. American women have a storied history on clay – Chris Evert's seven Roland-Garros titles and 125-match winning streak on the surface are legend; Serena Williams won Roland-Garros three times; Coco Gauff goes deep there every year and is back in the semi-finals this time – but the men, outside a brief burst in the 1980s and 1990s, have had little luck in the Open era. The 21st-century union between American men and Parisian clay courts is, somehow, more distant and fraught than Art's relationship with his wife, Tashi, in Challengers. The former of those relationships may be getting a tad more affectionate though. At Roland-Garros this year, Americans Tommy Paul and Frances Tiafoe broke the 22-year quarter-final drought. Tiafoe, previously an unaccomplished clay player, dialed in his whipped forehand and bunted backhand and didn't drop a set en route to the last eight. Paul scrapped to get there, gritting out a comeback from two sets down against the musclebound Marton Fucsovics and a marathon against Karen Khachanov despite a lower ab injury and a relative lack of raw pace on his shots. A smattering of other Americans fell short of the quarter-finals, but impressed nonetheless: Ben Shelton pushed defending champion Carlos Alcaraz to a tight four sets, unheralded Ethan Quinn made the third round. So no Art Donaldson heroics here, but certainly reason for optimism. The question is how much. The American men's runs ended abruptly and with little struggle. Paul's physical issues intensified, making him ideal prey that Alcaraz feasted ravenously on in the quarter-finals: 6-0, 6-1, 6-4. And Tiafoe lost in four sets to Lorenzo Musetti, a clay-courter by trade, accounting for himself well until 5-5 in a decisive third set before losing eight of the final 10 games. The matches outlined the highest standard of play on the slow, shifting clay surface. 'Tiafoe ran up against somebody who really is a clay-courter,' Steve Tignor, a longtime senior writer for said on Tuesday. 'He hadn't lost a set, but I don't know if he'd played anybody who was a really top-tier clay-court guy, who could really make him hit a lot of balls.' We spoke before Alcaraz-Paul, but asked about Paul's potential to win the match, Tignor said, 'I don't really give him too serious a chance.' In an early rally against Alcaraz, Paul got off some of his best groundstrokes, steadily pushing Alcaraz from side to side while improving his own court position. But on the run, from miles beyond the baseline, Alcaraz suddenly uncorked a forehand down the line that blazed past Paul. The shot signified the tennis gods' uneven distribution of gifts. Such power, so far outside Paul's capabilities and so comfortably within Alcaraz's, cannot be acquired or taught, only identified and honed. Even if Tiafoe or Paul had made the final, world No 1 Jannik Sinner most likely would have been waiting. Sinner hits heavy and hard with no cost to accuracy, a living nightmare of an opponent. 'Sinner already seems like a guy, maybe even more than Alcaraz, who's just going to stand in the way of the Americans,' Tignor said. 'I imagine if any of the Americans had come up against him [at Roland-Garros], they would have lost.' In April, Tiafoe told Reem Abulleil that tennis is more open since the end of the Big Three era: 'Anybody can win slams.' In the wake of the retirements of Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal, plus Novak Djokovic finally showing signs of slowing down, this figured to be an accurate take on the new tennis world order. Empirical evidence so far suggests otherwise. Sinner and Alcaraz have shared the last five major titles and are in their early 20s. They look intent on spending the next decade gradually proving Tiafoe's quote wrong. Paul and Tiafoe performed as well as can be expected at Roland-Garros. So what's the future for the American men on clay, this surface once more ruled by generational talents? There seems to be no room for mere mortals, but that's hardly the mortals' fault. They'll keep trying, keep improving, and perhaps eventually this country of 340 million will once again produce a men's Roland-Garros champion. Until then, American fans can best do justice to their rooting interests by respecting the enormity of the task.

Jessica Simpson poses with mini-me daughter Maxwell, 13, after split from husband Eric Johnson
Jessica Simpson poses with mini-me daughter Maxwell, 13, after split from husband Eric Johnson

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Jessica Simpson poses with mini-me daughter Maxwell, 13, after split from husband Eric Johnson

shared a selfie with her mini-me daughter Maxwell Drew Johnson on Tuesday following their recent trip to Paris to celebrate her 13th birthday. The 44-year-old former pop star - who boasts 15.4M social media followers - captioned the mother-daughter snap: 'Let the good times roll into the 7th grade my beautiful Maxwell Drew.' Jessica feels like her eldest child has 'been a teenager for a while' because she's 'an old soul.' 'I learn a lot from Maxwell. I don't know if she's just my firstborn or what, but she's just a well of depth, like, she's so amazing,' Simpson gushed to Extra on May 19. 'She knew more about Paris than my mom and I. So, you know, TikTok, she knew everywhere to go. Like, we had all these places to go, and she discovered, like, she has the nose. 'Like, she loves perfume, so going to a perfumery a private perfumery creating our own perfume. She'll say, "No, for the Maxwell Johnson Collection."' On June 30, the Jessica Simpson Collection CEO and her estranged second husband Eric Johnson will celebrate the 12th birthday of their son Ace, and they're also proud parents of six-year-old daughter Birdie. Jessica legally separated from the 45-year-old retired NFL tight end in January after a decade of marriage, and she also put her $11.5M seven-bedroom Hidden Hills marital mansion on the real estate market for $17.9M. Eric was still technically married to former pole-dancing instructor Keri D'Angelo when he originally met Simpson through a mutual friend at her May 2010 house party, and he finalized his divorce just five months later. The Breadcrumbs belter was roasted for made her 'cringey' musical comeback performing new single Blame Me and a cover of These Boots Are Made for Walking during the 23rd season finale of ABC singing competition American Idol on May 18. It marked Jessica's first time performing on TV in 15 years. 'Oh, my god, I was dying. I can't even tell you how long it's been since I've been that nervous. Like, I had to put hairspray on my feet to stand still, like, not that it actually keeps me put, but, like, my feet were sweating. I'm like, my feet don't sweat,' Simpson admitted to Extra. 'I just kept telling myself, "Do not cry. Do not cry. I know this is a big moment… do not cry." And then I see my dad, like, up in the corner and I'm like, "Ah, I'm going to cry. I'm going to cry. Do not cry. Just sing your songs. Just sing your songs."' Simpson gushed to Extra on May 19: 'I learn a lot from Maxwell. I don't know if she's just my firstborn or what, but she's just a well of depth, like, she's so amazing. She knew more about Paris than my mom and I!' (pictured with Tina Simpson last month) Jessica legally separated from the 45-year-old retired NFL tight end (L, pictured in 2015) in January after a decade of marriage, and she also put her $11.5M seven-bedroom Hidden Hills marital mansion on the real estate market for $17.9M Simpson was roasted for made her 'cringey' musical comeback performing new single Blame Me and a cover of These Boots Are Made for Walking during the 23rd season finale of ABC singing competition American Idol on May 18 Jessica also 'had a blast' portraying a 'very crazy role' that required 'eight hours of prosthetic makeup' in Ryan Murphy's legal drama All's Fair, which premieres this fall on Hulu The platinum-blonde Texan - who gets 679K monthly listeners on Spotify - will release her EP Nashville Canyon: Part 2 this summer. Jessica also 'had a blast' portraying a 'very crazy role' that required 'eight hours of prosthetic makeup' in Ryan Murphy's legal drama All's Fair, which premieres this fall on Hulu. Kim Kardashian, Naomi Watts, Niecy Nash, Teyana Taylor, Sarah Paulson, Glenn Close, Matthew Noszka, Elizabeth Berkley, Ed O'Neill, Judith Light, and Brooke Shields will also appear in the series. Simpson impressively celebrated seven years of sobriety on November 1. The Walmart collaborator first found fame with her three-octave soprano pipes followed by her quirky demeanor on MTV reality show Newlyweds (2003-2005) with first ex-husband Nick Lachey.

Shocking moment Mirra Andreeva smacks the ball into the crowd in frustration and leaves the court in tears in French Open meltdown after surprise defeat to World No361 Lois Boisson
Shocking moment Mirra Andreeva smacks the ball into the crowd in frustration and leaves the court in tears in French Open meltdown after surprise defeat to World No361 Lois Boisson

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Shocking moment Mirra Andreeva smacks the ball into the crowd in frustration and leaves the court in tears in French Open meltdown after surprise defeat to World No361 Lois Boisson

Mirra Andreeva was overcome with emotion in the face of a hostile Parisian crowd during her French Open quarter-final clash with home favourite Lois Boisson on Wednesday afternoon. The number-six seed was one of the tournament contenders ahead of her last-eight match and although her opponent had enjoyed a dazzling run in the capital after entering with a wildcard, few could have imagined any impediment to Andreeva's spot in the semi-final. But against the backdrop of a highly charged Philippe-Chatrier, the world No361 pulled off an even more impressive showing than she had against the number-three seed Jessica Pegula in her last-16 clash. Showing no sign of nerves, Boisson at her first-ever Grand Slam held her own in a tense first set by clawing her face back from 5-3 down to force a tiebreak. After claiming the opening set, the Frenchwoman opted not to let going 3-0 down impact her performance, with Boisson booking her spot in the semi-final in straight sets. Andreeva, by contrast, unravelled, with the Indian Wells champion showing her 18 years of age poignantly as she battled to keep her emotions in check. Mirra Andreeva was tilted by the French fans today… She'll be back better and stronger both physically and mentally — Barstool Tennis (@StoolTennis) June 4, 2025 Mirra Andreeva narrowly avoided punishment when she shanked a ball into the crowd The Russian teenager was unable to do so however after making an error in the fourth game of the second set, smashing the ball in frustration into the stands. Andreeva was fortunate to receive a code violation of a warning for her antics, but was unable to keep her emotions in check. Wound up by the deeply partisan and - despite repeat warnings from the umpire - increasingly aggressive crowd, Andreeva called upon them to 'shut up' . The teenager also struggled with the presence of her coach Conchita Martinez as she grew increasingly frustrated with the errors in her game. At one point in the match, Andreeva's mother Raisa is believed to have left the players' box at her daugher's request. The 18-year-old later became embroiled with the umpire after she stopped play when Boisson indicated with her finger that she believed a ball had gone out. Coming down to check the mark, the umpire declared the ball out, prompting Andreeva to question why the point had been stopped and arguing that 'the ball touched the line'. When told that the ball had been struck long, Andreeva was incredulous as a volley of boos rained down on her from around the stadium. Lois Boisson is the lowest ranked semi-finalist at the French Open in over forty years After losing the match, Andreeva was however thoughtful to ensure that her sportsmanship did not desert her, greeting Boisson at the net with a hug of congratulations. But as she left the court, Andreeva appeared to let her emotions finally overcome her, seemingly departing in tears. Boisson's shock upset on the Paris clay makes her the lowest-ranked semi-finalist at the Grand Slam in over forty years. The 22-year-old has also netted prize money worth five times her career earnings to date, with a guaranteed sum of £586,341 for semi-finalists in the tournament. Boisson will face off with Coco Gauff en route to a potential history-making final appearance, after the former US Open champion defeated Madison Keys in three sets earlier on Wednesday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store